¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Awarenesses
1. awareness [n] - See also: awareness
Lexicographical Neighbors of Awarenesses
Literary usage of Awarenesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Movement and Mental Imagery: Outlines of a Motor Theory of the Complexer by Margaret Floy Washburn (1916)
"Awarenesses, Ach maintains, are a "function of the excitation of reproductive
... He groups them into four classes: awarenesses of meaning, that is, ..."
2. A History of Psychology by Otto Klemm (1914)
"The awarenesses of the latter class were already known as independent experiences.
... of awareness.3 Ach expressly distinguished these awarenesses from the ..."
3. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1912)
"I wish to emphasise the fact that the observers were hereby required to put all
conscious processes (including thoughts and awarenesses, if these occurred ..."
4. Educational Psychology by Edward Lee Thorndike (1913)
"These responses by the others are not simply awarenesses of the state of mind of
... Nor are they primarily awarenesses of the first party's states of mind. ..."
5. A Pluralistic Universe: Hibbert Lectures to Manchester College on the by William James (1909)
"We can't say that awareness of the alphabet as such is nothing more than twenty-
six awarenesses, each of a separate letter; for those are twenty-six ..."
6. Lectures on the Experimental Psychology of the Thought-processes by Edward Bradford Titchener (1909)
"... whether the awarenesses (which, remember, I do not myself experience as
awarenesses) may not be traced down from imaginal complexes; and secondly, ..."
7. A Text-book of psychology by Edward Bradford Titchener (1910)
"Some psychologists maintain, definitely, that there are awarenesses of meaning,
and awarenesses of relation, which cannot be reduced to simpler terms, ..."
8. An Outline of psychobiology by Knight Dunlap (1917)
"These awarenesses (which together we call consciousness) depend upon the action
of reflexes. ... The awarenesses just indicated are perceptual. ..."