¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Superpersonal
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Superpersonal
Literary usage of Superpersonal
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Martin Luther: A Study of Reformation by Edwin Doak Mead (1883)
"The nameless Thought, the nameless Power, the superpersonal Heart,— he shall
repose alone on that. He needs only his own verdict. No good fame can help, ..."
2. Martin Luther: A Study of Reformation, by Edwin D. Mead by Edwin Doak Mead (1883)
"The nameless Thought, the nameless Power, the superpersonal Heart,— he shall
repose alone on that. He needs only his own verdict. No good fame can help, ..."
3. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1910)
"They are, as it were, superpersonal presences which consist of persons and continue
... superpersonal interrelations in politics are of great consequence, ..."
4. The Soul of America: A Constructive Essay in the Sociology of Religion by Stanton Coit (1914)
"A social organism, then, if it is not to be called personal, might very well be
designated superpersonal. Thus, any one who worships either a concrete ..."
5. The Soul of America: A Constructive Essay in the Sociology of Religion by Stanton Coit (1914)
"A social organism, then, if it is not to be called personal, might very well be
designated superpersonal. Thus, any one who worships either a concrete ..."
6. Romanticism and the Romantic School in Germany by Robert Maximillian Wernaer (1909)
"I prefer to call it the superpersonal phase, as the larger term, of which, ...
Under the immediate influence of this superpersonal. the individual romantic ..."
7. A System of Natural Theism by Leander Sylvester Keyser (1917)
"An advocate of the view that God is superpersonal is Dr. Paul Carus, who, in a
recent book,2 says of God: "He is not personal, ..."