objectivism

noun

One of several doctrines holding that all reality is objective and external to the mind and that knowledge is reliably based on observed objects and events.

noun

An emphasis on objects rather than feelings or thoughts in literature or art.

noun

A school of modernist poetry emphasizing the poem itself as object, rather than focusing on its ostensible content.

noun

In philosophy, the tendency to magnify the importance of the objective elements of cognition; especially, the doctrine that knowledge of the non-ego takes precedence in time, in logical sequence, and in order of importance of all knowledge of the ego.

noun

The character, in a work of art or in its author, of being objective, in the sense of dramatic, presenting things as they are and persons as they seem to themselves and to one another.

noun

The state of being objective.

noun

Moral objectivism.

noun

One of several doctrines that holds that all of reality is objective and exists outside of the mind.

noun

The specific objectivist philosophy created by novelist Ayn Rand, endorsing productive achievement and logical reasoning.