42 Verbs to Use for the Word psychologies

to accompany Educational psychology

It was worth while to study the psychology of the Turks, because dimly then, but with ever-increasing distinctness, Germany foresaw that Turkey might be a counter of immense importance in the great conflict which was assuredly drawing nearer, though as yet its existence was but foreshadowed by the most distant reflections of summer lightning on a serene horizon.

"Neither do I understand the morbid psychology that finds satisfaction in cheating at solitaire," I succeeded in saying.

Yes, I could follow the psychology.

In this manner the Kaiser and his advisers created a national psychology which left open only two alternatives: the absolute humiliation of Russia and the consequent hegemony of Germany in Europeor war.

" It is my present purpose to discuss the moral psychology of the present revolt against the spirit of authority.

LAIRD, DONALD A. How to use psychology in business.

In each case I suggested that it would be well to read a little psychology.

FISHER, V. E. An Introduction to abnormal psychology.

The black man would have to change his psychology or remain where he was, a creature of poverty, hovels, and dirt; but amid such surroundings he could not change his psychology.

This may not be a very logical position for the peasants to have taken up, but anyone who knows anything about Russia will see that it fitted their psychology to a fraction.

Whether they got the psychology from killing or reading or hearing or playing soldier or training makes no difference.

Do you grasp the psychology?

He was no scientist and no savant, he had none of that spirit of imperturbable calm with which Shakespeare surveyed all mankind, none of that impartial sympathy with which Browning investigated the psychology of saints and sinners alike.

She knows best the psychology of the lost provinces, and what amount of annexation will spell weakness or strength.

But Europe generally made a great mistake in supposing that Germany could not learn psychology, and the process of its distillation into diplomacy when it interested her.

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886) is a profound ethical parable, in which, however, Stevenson leaves the psychology and the minute analysis of character to his readers, and makes the story the chief thing in his novel.

I went out to aid them, but did not like the psychology of this street, where death was teasing the footsteps of men, yapping at their heels.

Priestley, on the contrary, boldly avows the materialistic and deterministic consequences of his position, holds that psychical phenomena are not merely accompanied by material motions but consist in them (thought is a function of the brain), and makes psychology, as the physics of the nerves, a part of physiology.

It was not worth her while to master the psychology of other civilised nations, since she was out not to understand them, but to conquer them.

Each crowns the work of his predecessor with a unifying conclusion; each demands and offers a genetic psychology which finds the origin of all the spiritual functionsfrom sensation and feelings of pleasure and pain up to rational cognition and moral willin a single fundamental power of the soul.

No poem has surpassed his Alice Fell, or Poverty in presenting the psychology of childish grief, or his We Are Seven in voicing the faith of "...

London in the twentieth century is very unlike Paris in the eighteenth century, or Florence in the fourteenth, if only because it is very difficult for any considerable proportion of the citizens to be gathered under circumstances likely to produce the special 'Psychology of the Crowd.'

The psychology of the French and English was a useless study, for she was merely going to fight them, but for years she had been studying with an industry and a patience that put our diplomacy to shame (as was most swiftly and ignominiously proven when it came into conflict with hers) the psychology of the Turks.

These facts, in so far as they represent the nervous disturbance produced by certain conditions of life in political communities, are again closely connected with the one point in the special psychology of politics which has as yet received any extensive considerationthe so-called 'Psychology of the Crowd,' on which the late M. Tarde, M. Le Bon, and others have written.

42 Verbs to Use for the Word  psychologies