Friday, January 6, 2017
Defining Liberalism and Conservatism
The develop broadhanded, if in its Anglo-Norman and midriff French etymological sense, suffer be applied to a grandparent generous in gravid their favorite grandson an over-the-top outset present, such as a car. It can describe a someone open to crude behavior or opinions or an individual who is give up to be open-minded and non beholden to conventional wisdom. In education, be liberal has positive connotation, because it agent the student is a someone striving to expand his birth and understanding. It means he is willing to go beyond rote exercises of memorization and is expansive in his willingness to learn. The Oxford English Dictionary (OED Â) countersinks liberal  primarily as large-minded in giving; generous, greathearted  (OED). The etymology set forth is:\nAnglo-Norman and plaza French . . . free in giving, generous, benevolent, magnanimous (12th cent. in archaic French), suitable for a free or noble person (c1200; especially of studies, education , arts, professions), independent, unconstrained (14th cent.), (of the will) free (14th cent.), of noble birth (14th cent.), (with extension to the ancient world) free, not toadyish (late 14th cent.), speaking freely (c1480)  (OED, emphasis added).\nLiberal is a word with a grand definition, right? After all, what could be banish about macrocosm magnanimous, generous, open to learning newfangled things, and even better, new aspect processes? Wouldnt any mother deprivation her son or young lady to grow up to be liberal?\nThe answer is, much than half of the United States not only does not exigency their child to be liberal, scarcely the mere utterance of the word raises their blood pressure to throw range. In fact, no be how certain dictionaries may define the word liberal,  its meaning has been hijacked by political rhetoric, and not in the positive sense in the beginning associated with the word.\nA historical overview is safe to the first kind of negative conno tation found in the use of the word. Liberal...
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