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  1. Eutopia definition: a place in which human society, natural conditions, etc., are so ideally perfect that there is complete contentment.. See examples of EUTOPIA used in a sentence.

  2. The meaning of EUTOPIA is a country of ideal felicity and perfection; sometimes : utopia.

    • Part 1: Modern Utopia
    • Part 2: Postmodern Eutopia
    • Part 3: Metamodern Protopia

    At the Right Distance from Nowhere

    “The Prologue and the Promise” by Robert McCall(1919–2010). A mural commissioned by Walt Disney’s EPCOT Center in Orlando, Florida. Even long before Thomas More’s coinage of the term “utopia” through the 1516 “social-science-fiction” novel with that word as its title, utopias (by whatever name these dreams may have taken) have exerted an influence on the sociological imagination of people around the world: how could society be different than it is? Not just different. Radically, dramatically,...

    Utopia: The farther away, the closer you get

    We all have an inherent tendency to believe that great changes in ourselves, our archetypal “hero’s journey” of inner transformation, requires us not to look under the nearest rock or in the neighboring village, but travel to a faraway shore— be it the Far East, the vestiges of a glorious past, the rollercoasters of psychedelic weirdness, or mind-bending koans in the shape of quantum mechanical equations — for the transformation to occur in full and earnest. We tend to believe that a more pro...

    Utopia: Off with their heads!

    Perhaps More never meant for his Utopia to be more than a parody-by-reversal of his Renaissance or Early Modern England — a looking glass through which the imperfections and unenlightened practices and norms of his society became apparent. Likely, More himself intended for the distance to be kept; his tone is hardly one of a fiery revolutionary. But already in his days, Protestant leaders were fanning the flames of peasant revolts against all authority on the European continent. The longing f...

    The Secret Corner Good Place?

    A house in the self-governing anarchic commune Christiania in Copenhagen, Denmark. If Modernity, in its deeper sense, originated in the emergence of “perspective” in the visual arts, in the Renaissance paintings of Northern Italy — it only began to fully come into fruition around the early 19th century in Europe, with industrialization and the rise to prominence of the scientific-rational worldview. And, of course, with the Enlightenment beginning to shape society as a whole.

    Eutopia: Two counterreactions to Modernity

    From around this time onwards — when Modernity was beginning to bloom in full — counterreactions to the Modern project started to appear. These reactions came from two distinct sources. One was the resistance of the colonized, of slaves, of indigenous peoples, of non-European civilizations and traditions around the world. New such sources of questioning, resistance, and attempts at redefining knowledge, reality, power relations, and nature itself have emerged ever since. In today’s world, for...

    Eutopia: Breaking out of the Renaissance painting

    In terms of societal visioning, of the release of the sociological imagination as a force for transformation, this shift from Modern to Postmodern worldviews entails a corresponding shift from Utopia to Eutopia — from nowhereland to “the good place”. The Postmodern mind holds that “the good place” is not somewhere distant, nor a static vision like Plato’s Republic: it’s here and now — but it is more contextual, more local, more momentary, more subversive. The Good Place is hidden in plain sig...

    To Touch the Event Horizon

    Photo by note thanun on Unsplash In its original, minimalist — and admittedly rather lacking — formulation by Kevin Kelly, Protopia is simply a term that denotes the gradual improvement of society over time, without claiming either perfection or the reaching of a point of stability. If we cannot allow ourselves to believe in a future paradise that has stabilized around a blissful state of affairs (Utopia), and we find it insufficient to look for those beautiful little exceptions of what life...

    Protopia: Beyond Kelly’s original definition

    The correct synthesis of Utopia and Eutopia should be able to do more: It should inspire hope and spark the imagination beyond what reforms and gradual improvements can; it should bring a coordinating shared sense of direction for millions of unique but inter-related collaborators who are somehow part of the same societal transformation across sectors (tech, arts, spirituality, business, politics, movements, academia); and it should combine the sense of the tremendous, the open horizon of Uto...

    Protopia: Another set of assumptions generate another set of futures

    Unsurprisingly, perhaps, Protopian activism requires some different basic assumptions about reality than Eutopian activism. In a sense, the Protopian vision breaks the one great taboo of the Postmodern mind: to order and organize different perspectives into a grander scheme. But it is no longer the scheme of a 3D world with a certain goal in the distance — it corresponds, rather, to folding through a fourth or even fifth dimension, showing how many different goals are possible, yet complexly...

  3. The earliest known use of the noun eutopia is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for eutopia is from 1553, in the writing of Thomas Wilson, humanist and administrator. eutopia is of multiple origins. A borrowing from Latin.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › UtopiaUtopia - Wikipedia

    Utopias. A utopia ( / juːˈtoʊpiə / yoo-TOH-pee-ə) typically describes an imaginary community or society that possesses highly desirable or near-perfect qualities for its members. [1] It was coined by Sir Thomas More for his 1516 book Utopia, which describes a fictional island society in the New World .

  5. Mar 21, 2024 · While utopia is often associated with an idealized society that might be unattainable or exist only in imagination, eutopia suggests a more practical and attainable vision of a society that is fundamentally good and desirable, emphasizing the possibility of achieving such a society.

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  7. EUTOPIA definition: a place in which human society , natural conditions, etc., are so ideally perfect that... | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples.

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