What is another word for utopias?

Pronunciation: [juːtˈə͡ʊpi͡əz] (IPA)

Utopias are imaginary, ideal, and perfect worlds that humans dream of for a better future. People use synonyms for utopias such as paradise, Eden, elysium, Shangri-la, heaven, and idyll to refer to a place or situation that is beyond reach but still ideal. The terms "arcadia," "heaven," "nirvana," and "promised land" are also used interchangeably in literature and religious texts. These synonyms reflect aspirations that humans have for what the future could bring and how they envision their lives to be. Through imagining utopias, people are motivated to strive for a better society, and these synonymous terms depict various ways in which an ideal world could exist.

What are the paraphrases for Utopias?

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What are the hypernyms for Utopias?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    heavens, paradises, Utopian dreams, ideal societies, ideal worlds, idyllic places, perfect societies, utopian visions.

Usage examples for Utopias

They repudiated with one consent the socialist utopias of France, and refrained on principle from committing themselves to, or even discussing, any positive scheme of reconstruction whatsoever.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae
Both the one and the other are utopias; they are absorbed in realizing an abstract principle, and they, as a matter of fact, produce exactly the opposite of what they aim at.
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae
Personal repression and dreaming produce not only love poems, but poems containing utopias of society, plans for improvement.
"The Literature of Ecstasy"
Albert Mordell

Famous quotes with Utopias

  • Why have we had to invent Eden, to live submerged in the nostalgia of a lost paradise, to make up utopias, propose a future for ourselves?
    Julio Cortazar
  • I believe that all my work explores the human desire or obsession for utopias, and the structure of all my works is the search for utopias lost and rediscovered.
    Marguerite Young
  • Utopia is a framework for utopias, a place where people are at liberty to join together voluntarily to pursue and attempt to realize their own vision of the good life in the ideal community but where no one can impose his own utopian vision upon others.
    Robert Nozick
  • Secondly, the student is trained to accept historical mis-statements on the authority of the book. If education is a pre- paration for adult life, he learns first to accept without question, and later to make his own contribution to the creation of historical fallacies, and still later to perpetuate what he has learnt. In this way, ignorant authors are leading innocent students to hysterical conclusions. The process of the writers' mind provides excellent material for a manual on logical fallacies. Thirdly, the student is told nothing about the relationship between evidence and truth. The truth is what the book ordains and the teacher repeats. No source is cited. No proof is offered. No argument is presented. The authors play a dangerous game of winks and nods and faints and gestures with evidence. The art is taught well through precept and example. The student grows into a young man eager to deal in assumptions but inapt in handling inquiries. Those who become historians produce narratives patterned on the textbooks on which they were brought up. Fourthly, the student is compelled to face a galling situation in his later years when he comes to realize that what he had learnt at school and college was not the truth. Imagine a graduate of one of our best colleges at the start of his studies in history in a university in Europe. Every lecture he attends and every book he reads drive him mad with exasperation, anger and frustration. He makes several grim discoveries. Most of the "facts", interpretations and theories on which he had been fostered in Pakistan now turn out to have been a fata morgana, an extravaganza of fantasies and reveries, myths and visions, whims and utopias, chimeras and fantasies.
    Khursheed Kamal Aziz
  • There were a lot of utopias in the nineteenth century, wonderful societies that we might possibly construct. Those went pretty much out of fashion after World War I.Writers started doing dystopias after we saw the effects of trying to build utopias that required, unfortunately, the elimination of a lot of people before you could get to the perfect point, which never arrived.
    Margaret Atwood

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