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Stemming from the Greek word ''despot:'' an autocratic ruler.  
Stemming from the Greek word ''despot:'' an autocratic ruler.  


Aristotle distinguishes despotism from tyranny; Defining tyranny as a form of governance that is acquired by force, maintained by violence and therefore inherently unstable. Whereas despotism is a continuous oppressive rule of its abiding subject by an absolute power, the only form of power they now. <ref>https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803095713235</ref>
Aristotle distinguishes despotism from tyranny; Defining tyranny as a form of governance that is acquired by force, maintained by violence and therefore inherently unstable. Whereas despotism is a continuous oppressive rule of its abiding subjects by an absolute power, the only form of power they now. <ref>https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803095713235</ref>


=== Dialectic ===
=== Dialectic ===

Revision as of 12:52, 24 January 2025

𝐀

Apophatic

Knowing what something is by knowing what it is not.

Most often used in relation to christian theology; the belief that you can only know God through knowing what they are not.[1]

Etymology: From Greek apophatikΓ³s, meaning "denial".

Found in: On Anarchism by Noam Chomsky, used in the context of anarchists defining anarchism apophatically, by describing anarchism only through what anarchism opposes.

𝐁

𝐂

Concatenation

A series/string of interconnected things.

"A group of things linked together or occurring together in a way that produces a particular result or effect."[2]

Also Concat: A function combining texts/strings.

𝐃

Despotism

An oppressive and often cruel exercise of power (by a government).[3]

Stemming from the Greek word despot: an autocratic ruler.

Aristotle distinguishes despotism from tyranny; Defining tyranny as a form of governance that is acquired by force, maintained by violence and therefore inherently unstable. Whereas despotism is a continuous oppressive rule of its abiding subjects by an absolute power, the only form of power they now. [4]

Dialectic

𝐄

𝐅

Fabulation

𝐆

𝐇

Hagiography

A term that refers to a biography which overtly and unjustifiably exalts its subject.

Also: The biography and study of a saint. [5]

𝐈

Inoculate

To inoculate is to introduce an infective agent into an organism, to treat, prevent or to immunize from a disease.[6]

It can also be used analogously to mean the introduction or implantation of a thought/idea into a mind.

Etymology/original use in Middle English: "to insert a bud in a plant for propagation."[6] π“‡š

Intransitive

𝐉

𝐊

𝐋

𝐌

Manichaism

𝐍

Ned Ludd

𝐎

Opprobium

𝐏

Panacea

Positivism

𝐐

𝐑

𝐒

Solipistic

Stultifying

𝐓

𝐔

𝐕

𝐖

𝐗

𝐘

𝐙

..πŸ™,𝟚,πŸ›,..

References