unindividuated
English
Etymology
From un- + individuate + -ed.
Adjective
unindividuated (not comparable)
- Not individuated; lacking individuation.
- 1989 December 24, Elizabeth Pincus, “Screwball Glitz And Revolt Against Misogyny”, in Gay Community News, volume 17, number 24, page 16:
- There are too many gratuitous and insulting characters, like Mary Fisher's employee, a stereotyped Latino stud, and the old people in a nursing home who are presented as unindividuated and naively happy.
- 2015 January 8, Leo Carton Mollica, “Explanation and nowness: an objection to the A-Theory”, in Philosophical Studies, :
- Thus, the first argument gives us no reason to think worlds unindividuated by times.