Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "psychologist"

Lexicographically close words:
psychograph; psychologic; psychological; psychologically; psychologische; psychologists; psychology; psychometric; psychometry; psychomotor
  1. By this it is not meant that the territory of judgment and inference should be delivered from the psychologist into the care of the logician; through such a division of labor both disciplines would suffer.

  2. It was a time when the categories of the physiologist lost slightly in credit and the categories of the psychologist won repute.

  3. I was not psychologist enough to deal with either triangle.

  4. As he watched the indicator, Kennedy asked one question after another about the working of the machine, and the manner in which the modern psychologist was studying every emotion.

  5. The curiosities of depravity are for the physician and the psychologist to discuss and cure.

  6. During the days that followed, the psychologist seemed to Craig to become progressively more didactic.

  7. There was no telling how long it would take him to shake his--sea legs, the psychologist had called it.

  8. Mr. Craig," the psychologist said slowly, "you have my authorization for you to return to Terra as a private citizen of that planet.

  9. The cleverness which in Paris is called blague, or boulevard-esprit, the psychologist discerns as imbecility.

  10. Nevertheless all the examples cited by the distinguished English psychologist demonstrate without effort the action of one or more of Wundt’s laws.

  11. The atoms of chemistry and the elements of the psychologist are not experienced facts, but still they play a valuable, indispensable role in the technique of the sciences.

  12. It is the union of artist and psychologist that places Rodin apart.

  13. In fact, this self-styled psychologist mapped anew the topography of the human spirit.

  14. In The Real Thing we recognise one of those unerring strokes that prove James to be the master psychologist among English writers.

  15. Sargeant has been credited with being the psychologist of the brush in this story.

  16. He was not enough of a psychologist for drama; he instinctively avoided a psychological plot--but how?

  17. Naturally enough, even the skilful psychologist is often unable to strike the balance between the three factors.

  18. The free association test is useful rather as giving the experienced psychologist hints to be followed up than as furnishing sure proof of the contents of the subject's mind.

  19. But when the psychologist speaks of the feelings, he usually means the elementary feelings.

  20. James", by virtue of frequency, means your brother or friend; but after the lecturer has been talking about the psychologist James, repetition of this name infallibly recalls the psychologist to mind.

  21. The main point is that the psychologist should take instinctive behavior as he finds it, and not allow himself to be prejudiced by the assumption that instinct must necessarily be useful.

  22. Nothing is more humane than psychology, in the long run, even though the psychologist may seem unfeeling in the course of his investigation.

  23. He feels that if the psychologist can find out what is the trouble with him, this may help.

  24. The psychologist experiments a great deal with the memorizing of nonsense material, because the process can be better observed here, from the beginning, than when sensible material is learned.

  25. An eminent psychologist has given a good account of a dream which he had while riding in an overcrowded compartment of a European train, with the window closed and himself wedged in tightly far from the window.

  26. Since money and teachers do not exist in a state of nature, there can be no instincts specifically related to them; and it is incumbent on the psychologist to show how such acquired tendencies are derived from the native tendencies.

  27. At the same time, the inferred mind they subject to examination will yield nothing but ideas, and it is a marvel how such a dream can regard those natural objects from which the psychologist has inferred it.

  28. The mathematician develops the import of given ideas; the psychologist investigates their origin and describes their relation to the rest of human experience.

  29. Being, as a humanitarian, worthy of respect in the highest degree, he can be, as a psychologist (i.

  30. In the Abyss I now turn to the time which is for me and every compassionate soul the most horrible, but for a psychologist the most interesting of all times.

  31. The psychologist has no difficulty in understanding mental diseases like hysteria or abnormal states like hypnotism, or any other unusual variation of mental life.

  32. All these proverbs and the maxims of other nations may be true, but can we deny that they are on the whole so trivial that a psychologist would rather hesitate to proclaim them as parts of his scientific results?

  33. The psychologist has never discovered a mental content which was not the effect or the after-effect of the stimulation of the senses.

  34. But there is one saying which the most modern psychologist would accept, as it might just as well be a quotation from a report of the latest exact statistics.

  35. The physicist and the chemist seek the laws of the physical universe, and the psychologist tried to act like them, to study the elements from which the psychical universe is composed and to find the laws which control them.

  36. The psychologist would not necessarily be at the end of his wit if the developments of to-morrow proved that mind-reading in Beulah Miller's case, or in any other case, is a fact beyond doubt.

  37. As long as the psychologist is only aware of an inexcusable waste of means by lack of careful research into the psychological reactions of the reader, he may leave the matter to the business circles which have to suffer by their carelessness.

  38. Hence the psychologist has every reason to be satisfied with the jury system as long as the women are kept out of it.

  39. The cobbler has to stick to his last; the psychologist has to be satisfied with analyzing the mental processes, but it is not his concern to mingle in politics.

  40. But in this contradictory situation the circle must be broken somewhere, and even at the risk of adding to the dangerous tumult which he condemns, the psychologist must break his silence in order to plead for silence.

  41. Indeed the psychologist has an unusually good chance to get glimpses of this filthy underworld, even if he does not frequent the squalid quarters of the astrologers.

  42. The psychologist is not astonished that though the technical improvements of the railways are increased, yet one serious accident follows another, as long as no one gives attention to the study of the engineer's mind.

  43. Every commercial traveller knows more than any psychologist can tell him, and even the waiter in the restaurant foresees when the guest sits down how large a tip he can expect from him.

  44. In such a situation even the psychologist may be excused for feeling tempted to contribute his little share to the discussion.

  45. The psychologist is "right in insisting that the atoms do not build up the whole universe of science.

  46. But if the psychologist is the real natural scientist of the soul, this whole interplay of ideas and emotions and volitions appears to him as a world of causally connected processes which he watches and studies as a spectator.

  47. He is a psychologist of the intuitive type.

  48. Moreover, passion blinds, and the natural and astonishing inaccuracy in observation and reporting[1] that every psychologist knows is multiplied wherever great emotions are at work.

  49. No psychologist has come nearer to a statement of the human situation than have these old specialists in the spiritual life.

  50. Here the directions are exact, and such as any psychologist of the present day might give.

  51. The subjective element, all that the psychologist means by apperception, must enter in, and control it.

  52. In the intellectual region, Richard of St. Victor was supreme in contemplation, and also a psychologist far in advance of his time.

  53. The psychologist may not be indifferent, of course, to any comprehensive theory of nervous action.

  54. The psychologist of the mysterious has, in these pages, recorded the terrifying aspects of the Manchurian campaign, which one could not have foreseen in all of its horror.

  55. But from so eminent a psychologist as William James, silence might well be construed as deterministic inability to reply to the position laid down.

  56. The psychologist takes up the story and from the dawn of desire to action finds no break--or at least none that future knowledge may not reasonably hope to make good.

  57. But I'd advise you to bring a professional psychologist along, because unless you're a trained psychologist yourself, they're not likely to mean much to you.

  58. I warned you that you should have brought a professional psychologist along," Melroy reminded him.

  59. Burton proved himself a keener observer and psychologist when he wrote (F.

  60. A psychologist that turns his back on mere subtleties and goes to work in a life of service has here a great opportunity, and should not forget, as Horace Mann said, "that for all that grows, one former is worth one hundred reformers.

  61. Placed in a sort of middle ground between physiology (summing up all the results of physical science) and general history (including the contributions of all the branches of sociology), the psychologist need not want for material.

  62. Of all this mass of materials the psychologist proper can directly make only a sparing use.

  63. The psychologist of the straiter sect tends, on the other hand, to carry us beyond mind and consciousness altogether.

  64. While a society has no right to be tolerant, because its first duty is to live, the psychologist may remain indifferent.

  65. The psychologist who desires to understand the period which we have so briefly sketched can only do so if, being attached to no party, he stands clear of the passions which are the soul of parties.

  66. Although the moralist is forced to deal severely with certain individuals, because he judges them by the types which society must respect if it is to succeed in maintaining itself, the psychologist is not in the same case.

  67. He was too good a psychologist not to entertain the greatest suspicion of large and incompetent assemblies of popular origin, whose disastrous results had been obvious to him during the whole of the Revolution.

  68. That of the psychologist would be quite different.


  69. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "psychologist" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.