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What does Utopia mean?

Utopia (Utopia) originally means "no place" or "good place". Extended as there are ideals, impossible to accomplish a good thing, its Chinese translation can also be understood as "乌" is no, "托" is the trust, "邦" is the country, "Utopia" is a good place to live, and "Utopia" is a good place to live. The three words "Utopia" together mean "imaginary country".

Utopia is an ideal group and society concept, the name from Thomas Moore's book "Utopia" written in the completely ideal **** and country "Utopia". It means the ideal perfect state, especially used to indicate the law, government and social situation.

Thomas Moore fictionalized a small island in the Atlantic Ocean with a perfect social, political and legal system. The term is used to describe an ideal and literary fictional society known as an "intentional community". The concept has also given rise to other concepts, most notably anti-utopia.

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Moore's book Utopia is very much linked to Plato's ideal state. It is an ideal, perfect **** and state (the view of the social egalitarians and pacifists), although his people have to work and struggle for it as well. But all the ugliness of society, such as poverty and misery, are far from this paradise. There are only a few legal provisions here, and no lawyers. And no townspeople are willing to wage war.

But they hire mercenaries from neighboring militant nations (which they let face threats because they want all the militants to perish in war, leaving only peace-loving people in the end). Such a society also welcomes all religious schools of thought with tolerance. Some readers think Moore wanted to use this as a blueprint for nation-building, while others think Moore didn't actually intend it that way.

Some took the firm position that Moore's Utopia actually served to satirize the English society of Moore's time with an ideal society. This view also logically explains the significance of the book and the country's name.

Utopia in Greek is ambiguously pronounced between "no place" and "good place": Utopia is a combination of the syllables ou- (meaning "not") and topos (meaning "not"). Utopia is a compound word made up of the syllables ou- (meaning "no") and topos (meaning "place"), but it is also homophonic with the homophonic prefix eu- (meaning "good"). This, in fact, suggests that "no place" is really "the perfect place".

Another version of the concept of utopia comes from the island of Panchaea, which is described in the Sacred History, written by Judah Myros in the 3rd century BC.

Baidu Encyclopedia - Utopia