¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Psychologies
1. psychology [n] - See also: psychology
Lexicographical Neighbors of Psychologies
Literary usage of Psychologies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Psychologic Foundations of Education: An Attempt to Show the Genesis of the by William Torrey Harris (1898)
"Old and New psychologies compared as io their Provinces and their Results for
Education. A Review. § 87. As a review of Part I, I will in this concluding ..."
2. Psychology, General and Applied by Hugo Münsterberg (1914)
"PART I. PRINCIPLES OF PURPOSIVE PSYCHOLOGY CHAPTER XXI IMMEDIATE REALITY The Two
psychologies.—We have described and explained the world of mental processes ..."
3. Psychology, General and Applied by Hugo Münsterberg (1914)
"PAET I. PRINCIPLES OF PURPOSIVE PSYCHOLOGY CHAPTER XXI IMMEDIATE REALITY The Two
psychologies.—We have described and explained the world of mental processes ..."
4. The Divine Pedigree of Man, Or, The Testimony of Evolution and Psychology to by Thomson Jay Hudson (1899)
"The Old psychologies Inadequate to a Solution of the Problem. IN order that there
may be no misunderstanding either on the part of the general reader or of ..."
5. Lessons of the War and the Peace Conference by Orestes Ferrara (1919)
"... have vibrated during the latter part of the war with the eloquent words of
statesmen in their enunciation of the two existing psychologies of the world. ..."
6. The Message of Philo Judaeus of Alexandria by Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie (1909)
"I. psychologies. Philo being an electic, we cannot expect to find in him any
exclusive, systematic, coherent psychology; on the contrary, we find just what ..."
7. The Herbartian Psychology Applied to Education: Being a Series of Essays by John Adams (1898)
"... CHAPTER II REVIEW OF psychologies / "VERBS of teaching govern two accusatives,
one of the person, another of the thing; as, ..."
8. The Herbartian Psychology Applied to Education: Being a Series of Essays by John Adams (1899)
"... CHAPTER II REVIEW OP psychologies "VERBS of teaching govern two accusatives,
one of the person, another of the thing; as, ..."