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simplistische

Simplistische is an adjective used in German and Dutch to describe explanations, analyses, or representations that are overly simple and fail to account for relevant complexity. In English, the closest equivalents are simplistic or oversimplified, but the term often carries a critical or pejorative nuance when applied to arguments or theories.

Etymology and related forms: The word derives from Latin simplisticus and entered European languages in the

Usage and connotations: Simplistische descriptions typically signal that a position reduces complex matters to a single

See also: Oversimplification, Reductionism, Essentialism, Simplification.

modern
period.
In
German,
the
form
simplistische
(with
its
inflected
variants)
is
used
before
feminine
nouns
or
in
certain
plural
constructions;
an
example
is
die
simplistische
Lösung.
Dutch
uses
a
closely
related
form
in
similar
contexts,
though
spelling
and
inflection
follow
Dutch
grammar.
factor,
ignores
counterarguments,
or
relies
on
essentialized
categories.
Critics
argue
that
such
rhetoric
can
hinder
nuanced
understanding,
policy
analysis,
or
scholarly
debate.
Proponents
may
argue
that
some
situations
justify
a
straightforward
model
as
a
first
approximation,
though
this
is
often
debated.