¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Subjectivise
1. [v -VISED, -VISING, -VISES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Subjectivise
Literary usage of Subjectivise
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1908)
"Hence, the epistemology that would subjectivise things into thoughts is only a
grimace or affectation because what is fundamentally motivated by, ..."
2. Literary Reviews and Criticisms by Prosser Hall Frye (1908)
"... in reality the merit of a style depends upon its logic and clearness."
The Frenchman, in a word, tends always to subjectivise his emotion and ..."
3. Essays Political, Social, and Religious by Richard Congreve (1900)
"We subjectivise the whole range of our thought, all the laws under which we live,
and thus carry sympathy into the most abstract science. ..."
4. The Religious Instinct by Thomas John Hardy (1913)
"It is by faith that we' subjectivise' the historical, by faith that the '
incorporation ' with Christ is realised in each of us. § 12. ..."
5. The Perfect Way; Or, The Finding of Christ: Or, The Finding of Christ by Anna Bonus Kingsford, Edward Maitland (1890)
"Wherefore man, as the microcosm, must imitate, and identify himself with, the
macrocosm, and subjectivise, or spiritualise, his experience before he can ..."