Pragmatists are mostly materialists, pay attention to practical results and don't like exaggeration. Absolute pragmatists will not entertain foolish ideas, face their own lives in a down-to-earth manner, speculate wildly, buy what they like when conditions permit, ignore it when conditions permit, and never dream of losing a treasure in the world.
Many intellectuals and historians regard romanticism as a rebound to the Enlightenment and a reflection on the Enlightenment era. Thinkers in the Enlightenment emphasized the absoluteness of deductive reasoning, while romanticism emphasized intuition, imagination and feeling, even to the point where some people criticized it as "irrationalism". Generally speaking, the Romantic Movement was spontaneously composed of many artists, poets, writers, musicians, politicians, philosophers and other figures who appeared in Europe from the end of18th century to the beginning of19th century. However, until the 20th century, the specific characteristics and definition of romanticism were still the subject of debate in the history of thought and literature.
Charles Baudelaire's definition is: "Romanticism is not based on random materials, nor emphasizes complete accuracy, but lies between the two and follows the feeling."