unculturality
English
Etymology
From un- + cultural + -ity.
Noun
unculturality (uncountable)
- The quality of being uncultural.
- 1991, Human Affairs, page 10:
- Harmony should be reached through the optimalization of links among (self-)reflection, integrativity, creativity and (self-)criticism, facing the main (and at the same time global) danger of unculturality, especially of barbarity against humanity and ecological indolence.
- 2003, Derek Pomeroy Brereton, Kinship and Landscape at Squam Lake, New Hampshire, →ISBN, page 328:
- Episodic experience edges one toward the certainty, i.e., the ‘unculturality’, of nature, thus enhancing authority.
- 2020 December 10, “Maroš Žilinka has become the new Attorney General, what does the President expect from him?”, in tekdeeps, archived from the original on 2022-02-07:
- He expects him to rehabilitate the prosecutor’s office and remove elements of institutional unculturality.
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