¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Subjectivising
1. subjectivise [v] - See also: subjectivise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Subjectivising
Literary usage of Subjectivising
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Christian View of God and the World as Centring in the Incarnation by James Orr (1893)
"This weakening down and subjectivising of the idea of guilt is to me a strong
condemnation of any theory from which it springs. ..."
2. The Reform of Education by Giovanni Gentile (1922)
"... and the pupil can only avoid appropriating, individualising, subjectivising
science by following that way which is very broad, very easy, and, alas, ..."
3. The Problem of Human Life as Viewed by the Great Thinkers from Plato to the by Rudolf Eucken (1909)
"... the modern era contains from the outset the germ of this subjectivising
movement, and has sought with ever-increasing energy to bring it to maturity. ..."
4. The Problem of Human Life as Viewed by the Great Thinkers from Plato to the by Rudolf Eucken (1909)
"... the modern era contains from the outset the germ of this subjectivising
movement, and has sought with ever-increasing energy to bring it to maturity. ..."
5. The Metaphysics of Nature by Carveth Read (1905)
"Perhaps this " something " is to be found in a primitive subjectivising of the
object, the attributing to it of a sub- consciousness of weight and other ..."
6. Historical Development of Speculative Philosophy from Kant to Hegel by Heinrich Moritz Chalybäus (1854)
"... the latter subjectivising, it tends back towards subjectiveness ; if the former
is the expressing of the hidden ground, the latter is ilie comprehending ..."
7. Biography: Or, Third Division of "The English Encyclopedia" edited by Charles Knight (1867)
"... the contractive movement, or subjectivising tendency, by which the natura
naturata falls back on the natura naturans, and becomes conscious of itself. ..."