presentist

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English

Etymology

present +‎ -ist

Adjective

presentist (comparative more presentist, superlative most presentist)

  1. Of or pertaining to presentism; viewing the past with a perspective limited to present-day attitudes and beliefs.
    • '"Many people lost their perspective in their euphoria and became parochial and presentist." (Wellman and Hogan, 2004)
    • "To read him as defensively fashioning what we now call a "black identity" is presentist." (McWhorter, 2009).

Noun

presentist (plural presentists)

  1. A follower of presentism.

References

  • Barry Wellman and Bernie Hogan (2004). "The Immanent Internet." Pp. 54-80 in Netting Citizens: Exploring Citizenship in a Digital Age, edited by Johnston McKay. Edinburgh: St. Andrew Press.
  • John McWhorter (2009), "The Entertainer: Louis Armstrong's Underrated Legacy." The New Yorker, December 14, 2009, p. 89.

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