¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Introspections
1. introspection [n] - See also: introspection
Lexicographical Neighbors of Introspections
Literary usage of Introspections
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Clever Hans (the Horse of Mr. Von Osten): (the Horse of Mr. Von Osten.) a by Oskar Pfungst (1911)
"... CHAPTER III THE AUTHOR'S introspections IN the preceding chapter we asked:
What is it that determines the horse's movements? ..."
2. The American Journal of Psychology by Edward Bradford ( Titchener, Granville Stanley Hall (1918)
"In order that an introspection should be of any value to a psychologist, he must
be able to compare it with other introspections. ..."
3. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1911)
"Since these introspections were not guided by suggestions of any kind, ...
The fact that many of the introspections failed to speak of intensity, therefore, ..."
4. The Influence of Caffein on Mental and Motor Efficiency by Harry Levi Hollingworth (1912)
"It was for these two purposes that the health introspections were originally ...
The introspections recorded in the health book were more or less general in ..."
5. The Psychological Experiences Connected with the Different Parts of Speech by Eleanor Harris (Rowland) Wembridge (1907)
"In this way the subject's introspections with regard to his convergence and ...
The following introspections show the near point at photograph 34; ..."
6. Critique of Word Association Reactions: An Experimental Study by Arthur Howard Sutherland (1913)
"THE introspections Special care has been taken to determine to what extent the
common statements about imagery and other facts in the introspections are the ..."
7. Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1879)
"Here are typical introspections teeming with unanalyzed doubts, certainties, ...
Should the introspections in my experimental study on choosing be ..."
8. Journal of Applied Psychology by American Psychological Association, American Association for Applied Psychology (1918)
"introspections at the outset here revealed some contraction of the throat muscles,
a movement of the tongue upward and forward, and a sudden interruption in ..."