dialecticalizationEtymologyFrom dialectical + -ization.nounThe act or process of making dialectical.; The process of (a language) separating into dialects.“Caxton noted: "And that comyn englysshe that is spoken in one shire varyeth from a nother."^([sic])¹⁹ But political, social, and technical forces can arrest dialecticalization and impose a standard speech, as tends to occur in large states.”The act or process of making dialectical.; The introduction of a dialectic (exchange of arguments or contradiction of ideas) to explore an idea or topic.“Croce also opposed Hegel’s methodical dialecticalization of distinct aspects of reality, individual facts and empirical concepts,¹⁹⁰ not because of the quaint biases it revealed but because Croce was not a universalist like Hegel, only a partial universalist, lacking also the macro-microcosmos motif; and Croce could not support Hegel’s Naturphilosophie and triadic monism because he believed in a s”The act or process of making dialectical.; The initiation of dialectic (conflict), especially class conflict.“One masterly way to avoid that danger is by a cultural revolution, that dialecticalization which has yesterday, today or tomorrow and which avoids becoming static because it is an ongoing effort for change.”