Noun
personalist (plural personalists)
(philosophy) An advocate of personalism
Pierre Teilhard was a consistent personalist. In his youth he may well have experienced the 'fascination of the impersonal and generalized' and confused them with the universal; but as soon as he began to develop his thought, he made a complete change of direction. Henri de Lubac
The conservatives were divided into a host of personalist factions and lacked coherent leadership, but Bonilla made some efforts to reorganize the conservatives into a "national party." Source: Internet
For example, Hacking writes Hacking (1967, Section 3, page 316), Hacking (1988, page 124) "And neither the Dutch book argument, nor any other in the personalist arsenal of proofs of the probability axioms, entails the dynamic assumption. Source: Internet
Hacking wrote Hacking (1967, Section 3, p. 316), Hacking (1988, p. 124) "And neither the Dutch book argument, nor any other in the personalist arsenal of proofs of the probability axioms, entails the dynamic assumption. Source: Internet
It is true that in consistency a personalist could abandon the Bayesian model of learning from experience. Source: Internet
One major philosophical view which was rejected by all the schools mentioned above was the view held by the Pudgalavadin or 'personalist' schools. Source: Internet