Gandhism

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English

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Alternative forms

Etymology

From Gandhi +‎ -ism.

Noun

Gandhism (uncountable)

  1. (political science, philosophy) The philosophy and principles of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, encompassing the broad tenets of upholding truth, pacifism, and nonviolent activism; also rarely used for Gandhian economics.
    • 1945, Mohanlal Lallubhai Dantwala, Gandhism Reconsidered[1], page 28:
      Another critic observes Gandhism dreads the 'onslaught of technology' because it creates unemployment.
    • 1972, Aleksandr Ivanovich Titarenko, Morality and politics;: Critical essays on contemporary views about the relationship between morality and politics in bourgeois sociology[2], page 142:
      In trying to curb modern political Machiavellianism, some of the more consistent humanists find this analogy in the ethical ideas and the political practice of Gandhiism.

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