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Definition of Human process
1. Noun. A process in which human beings are involved.
Specialized synonyms: Linguistic Process, Ossification, Psychoanalytic Process, Social Process, Uptake
Lexicographical Neighbors of Human Process
Literary usage of Human process
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Common Cause by John R. Meader (1911)
"'plex, but this is nothing to the point; for complex or simple, the issue in
question is, what is the human process? The postulate laid down in Economic ..."
2. The Man-made World: Or, Our Androcentric Culture by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1911)
"But destruction is not a human process—merely a male process of eliminating the
unfit. ... Greater than either is the human process, to develop fitness. ..."
3. The Works of Orestes A. Brownson by Orestes Augustus Brownson, Henry Francis Brownson (1883)
"Scriptural revelation is rather a Divine help to the human process. This human
process is similar to what I have already described. ..."
4. Religion and Science: A Series of Sunday Lectures on the Relation of Natural by Joseph LeConte (1877)
"Scriptural revelation is rather a Divine help to the human process. This human
process is similar to what I have already described. ..."
5. General Sociology: An Exposition of the Main Development in Sociological by Albion Woodbury Small (1905)
"... human mind is the ethics of all of the human process which men can know.
The only maintainable scale of moral permissions and prohibitions is the scale ..."
6. The Meaning of Social Science by Albion Woodbury Small (1910)
"They could not see that the economic process is only a primary function within
the whole human process. Their voice was the voice of philosophy. ..."