IMPACTS OF GLOBALIZATION ON IDOLOGIES DRIVERS
Ideological drivers of globalization continue to flourish and evolve into more impactful cultural phenomenon. Ideologies have driven the trajectory of globalization, toyed with it, seemingly opposed it, altered it, and, perhaps, even birthed it.
Ideology steers the direction of humanity as a whole, integrating people, ideas, governments, businesses, and dialogue in spite of borders and distance in a process known as globalization. Belief systems, epistemic frameworks, metaphysical paradigms, and value judgments can all be classified as ideology if they are of potential political (and, ipso facto, social) significance. Mills, “any reflection that is of possible political significance”. I, in inclination towards hermeneutical realism, subscribe to the belief that ideology can be defined as, according to prominent political sociologist C. This is an intentional actualization of epistemic mechanisms by hermeneutical nominalists who ascribe the utility of a linguistic apparatus to the intent of the agent espousing it. Ultramodern colloquial usage takes a simpler approach by imposing the term upon the beliefs and opinions of those with whom one disagrees. Later, Marxists described it as a malicious veil blinding the masses to the reality of their exploitation. Friedrich Engels, a prominent German philosopher, used the term to refer to abstract ideas that were independent of tangible existence. Defining “ideology” is a burdensome feat, as the term is used in a plethora of diverse contexts.