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Definition of Apartness
1. n. The quality of standing apart.
Definition of Apartness
1. Noun. The state or quality of being apart. ¹
2. Noun. The result or product of being apart. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Apartness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Apartness
Literary usage of Apartness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to Psychology by Mary Whiton Calkins, ( (1914)
"The doctrine of Chapter IV. differs from that of Lipps and Ebbinghaus in regarding
the consciousness of apartness not as elemental but as fusion of the ..."
2. A First Book in Psychology by Mary Whiton Calkins (1912)
"The doctrine of Chapter IV. differs from that of Lipps and Ebbinghaus in regarding
the consciousness of apartness not as elemental but as fusion of the ..."
3. The Bible of Nature: Five Lectures Delivered Before Lake Forest College on by John Arthur Thomson (1908)
"We must not exaggerate the apartness of the animate from the inanimate, nor must
we depreciate it. On the one hand, we must recognize that modern progress ..."
4. The Child of Democracy: Being the Adventures of the Embryo State (1894)
"THE SCIENTIFIC apartness I TOOK to Ann Arbor very definite notions of learning
as a practice. It was not a precept with me, it was my experience. ..."
5. The Vegetation of a Desert Mountain Range as Conditioned by Climatic Factors by Forrest Shreve (1915)
"In July this relation was reversed, the apartness of the minima being 24.1°, that
of the maxima 29.4°, while for August the two were more nearly the same, ..."
6. A Manual of Psychology by George Frederick Stout (1915)
"If the cutaneous sensibility is not specially adapted for the perception of
apartness, this fails altogether. As we have seen, there is no perception of ..."
7. College Sermons by Langdon Cheeves Stewardson (1913)
"involve therefore a certain apartness from patent facts and forces in the world.
It involves apartness from vice and corruption, apartness from meanness and ..."
8. The System of Animate Nature: The Gifford Lectures Delivered in the by John Arthur Thomson (1920)
"... (3) a forgetfulness of the apartness of human society from the animal world
with which it is nevertheless solidary—an apartness which forbids any ..."