individualistic
English
Etymology
From individualist + -ic or individual + -istic.
Adjective
individualistic (comparative more individualistic, superlative most individualistic)
- More interested in individual people than in society as a whole.
- 1895, The Citizen, page 398:
- It is, then, as a treatise of social forces, individualistic and collectivistic, in German literature that Francke's work must be tested, not as a history of the artistic form and content of that literature.
- 2001, David Matsumoto, The Handbook of Culture and Psychology, page 395:
- People in individualistic cultures may be more concerned with distributive justice than people in collectivistic cultures because they have such clear-cut notions of individual equity.
- Interested in oneself rather than others; egocentric.
- 2012, Carl Ratner, Cooperation, Community, and Co-Ops in a Global Era, page 46:
- A few examples will demonstrate the cultural basis of individualistic, greedy, and anticooperative behavior.
- 2014 December 2, David DiSalvo, “Are You Vulnerable to the Hipster Effect?”, in Psychology Today[1], archived from the original on 30 August 2025:
- The researchers posit that something they call the “hipster effect” asserts itself in human populations no matter how individualistic we imagine ourselves to be, because it’s individuality itself that sparks conformity.
- Having idiosyncratic behaviour or ideas.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
more interested in the individual than in society as a whole
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