Zeitgeist
Zeitgeist ( German pronunciation: [ˈtsaɪtɡaɪst]) (from German Zeit-time and Geist- spirit) is "the spirit of the times" and/or "the spirit of the age." Zeitgeist is the general cultural, intellectual, ethical, spiritual, and/or political climate within a nation or even specific groups, along with the general ambience, morals, and sociocultural direction or mood of an era (similar to the English word mainstream or trend).
Origins
The concept of Zeitgeist goes back to Johann Gottfried Herder and other German Romanticists such as Cornelius Jagdmann, but is best known in relation to Hegel's philosophy of history. In 1769 Herder wrote a critique of the work Genius seculi by the philologist Christian Adolph Klotz and introduced the word Zeitgeist into German as a translation of genius seculi (Latin: genius - "guardian spirit" and saeculi - "of the century").
The German Romanticists habitually tempted to reduce the past to essences and treated the Zeitgeist as a historical character in its own right, rather than a generalized description for an era. Leonard Pitts, Jr., of the Miami Herald, asserts the use of the term as meaning "... perverse era " in a recent OpEd, Miami Herald, 10-2009.
Translation
The word "Zeitgeist" occurs as such in the following languages: English, German, Spanish, French, Norwegian (Bokmål), Portuguese, Finnish, Turkish.
Translation(s) in other languages: Danish: Tidsånden, Italian: Spirito del tempo, Hebrew: צייטגייסט, Latin: Genius saeculi, Dutch: Tijdgeest, Japanese: 時代精神, Polish: Zeitgeist (pojęcie filozoficzne), Swedish: Tidsanda, Thai: ไซท์ไกสท์.
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