Musilesque

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Musil +‎ -esque

Adjective[edit]

Musilesque (comparative more Musilesque, superlative most Musilesque)

  1. Resembling the lack of inner convictions described by Robert Musil in the title character of his unfinished novel The Man Without Qualities.
    • 1968, Gerard Radnitzky, Contemporary Schools of Metascience - Volume 1, page 148:
      It is a position-taking which must avoid the other extreme: the Musilesque situation, in which man founders on the unlivable ideal of an exact, scientific practice of life, which ideal cannot guide practice (E. Heintel, K.-O. Apel).
    • 2004, Joshua Landy, Philosophy As Fiction, page 141:
      For one thing, the very fact that Marcel possesses, and unwittingly betrays, an idiosyncratic point of view—the fact that Proust has opted to present him as a decidedly un-Musilesque “man with qualities,” endowing him with a series of propositions and dispositions that map his "world" —tells us something about Prous, confirming that perspective is, so to speak, part of his perspective.
    • 2011, L. Donskis, Modernity in Crisis: A Dialogue on the Culture of Belonging:
      The world is increasingly becoming a Single Central Europe with its Kafkaesque anonymity, Musilesque human-traits-free individuality, or the divided individual without individuality and indivisibility, Orwellesque Newspeak and total control, if not manufacturing, of history.