Realism
Appearance
Realism, Realistic, or Realists may refer to:
In the arts
[edit]- Realism (arts), the general attempt to depict subjects truthfully in different forms of the arts
Arts movements related to realism include:
- American Realism
- Classical Realism
- Literary realism, a movement from the mid 19th to the early 20th century
- Neorealism (art)
- Italian neorealism (film)
- Indian neorealism (film)
- New realism, a movement founded in 1960
- Realism (art movement), 19th-century painting group
- Theatrical realism, one of the many types of theatre such as Naturalism
- Vienna School of Fantastic Realism, an art movement
- Socialist realism, an art style developed in the Soviet Union
In philosophy
[edit]Realist approaches in philosophy include:
- Aesthetic realism (metaphysics)
- Agential realism (Barad)
- Australian realism
- Austrian realism
- Christian realism
- Conceptualist realism (Wiggins)
- Critical realism (disambiguation)
- Dialectical realism (Hacking)
- Direct realism
- Empirical realism
- Entity realism
- Epistemic structural realism
- Epistemological realism
- Hermeneutic realism (Heidegger)
- Internal realism, also known as "pragmatic realism" (Putnam)
- Local realism, the view held by the authors of the EPR paper
- Logical realism, the conviction the rules of logic are mind-independent
- Metaphysical realism
- Modal realism
- Model-dependent realism (Hawking and Mlodinow)
- Moderate realism
- Moral realism
- Naïve realism
- New realism (philosophy)
- Ontic structural realism
- Peircean realism
- Perspectival realism
- Platonic realism
- Quasi-realism
- Rational realism (Bardili)
- Realistic monism (G. Strawson)
- Realistic rationalism (Katz)
- Referential realism
- Relational realism
- Romantic realism
- Scientific realism
- Scotistic realism
- Semantic realism (epistemology) (a position criticized by Dummett)
- Semantic realism (philosophy of science) (Psillos)
- Semirealism (Chakravartty)
- Set-theoretic realism (Maddy)
- Speculative realism
- Subtle realism
- Theological critical realism
- Transcendental realism (Schelling, Schopenhauer, Bhaskar)
- Truth-value link realism (a position criticized by Dummett)
In the social sciences
[edit]Realist approaches in the social sciences include:
- Ethnographic realism, either a descriptive word, i.e. of or relating to the first-hand participant-observation practices of ethnographers, or a writing style or genre that narrates in a similar fashion.
- Legal realism, the view that jurisprudence should emulate the methods of natural science, i.e., rely on empirical evidence
- Realism (international relations), the view that world politics is driven by competitive self-interest
- Structural realism, in international relations
- Subtle realism, in social science research methodology
Media
[edit]- Realistic (album), an album by Ivy
- Realism (Steril album), an album by Steril
- Realism (The Magnetic Fields album), an album by The Magnetic Fields
- The Realist (American magazine), a satirical magazine
- The Realist (British magazine), a magazine dedicated to scientific humanism
Politics
[edit]- Czech Realist Party, former political party in Austria-Hungary
- Realists (political party), conservative political party in the Czech Republic
Other uses
[edit]- Realistic (brand), a brand of home audio electronics produced by RadioShack
See also
[edit]- Anti-realism
- Classical realism (disambiguation)
- Critical realism (disambiguation)
- Depressive realism
- Digitalism
- Irrealism (disambiguation)
- Neorealism (disambiguation)
- Pseudorealism
- Raëlism
- Reality
- Real (disambiguation)
- All pages with titles beginning with realism
- All pages with titles containing realism