prepossession การใช้
- It is a matter on which we can find no law but our own prepossessions.
- As proof of what prepossession can do to a trained mind the case is invaluable ."
- A set of beaded ear pendants with dangling metal triangles conferred elegance and prepossession on a Masai wife in Kenya.
- There arose in Gnostic circles after the 2nd century the apocryphal accounts of the lives of the Apostles, indicating dogmatic prepossessions.
- In those books their authors undertook a radical critique of the " prepossessions of the European Enlightenment concerning the nature of human knowing and doing ."
- Macaulay's bluff and strenuous character, his rhetorical style, his unphilosophical conception of history, were entirely out of harmony with Morison's prepossessions.
- The St . Leon family is displaced several times, and they learn that the " prepossessions of mankind are clearly unfavourable to a new-comer, an emigrant who has quitted his former connections and the scenes of his youth.
- Lingard himself argued that one of his chief duties as an historian was : " to weigh with care the value of the authorities on which I rely, and to watch with jealousy the secret workings of my own personal feelings and prepossessions.
- And even if they will, they will not have nulled design flaws ( Jeffers ), and they will not have nulled the possible bias of human interpretors, because it would still be the same team with the same prepossession that would do the analysis.
- Your Royal Highness, not possessing a seat in the legislative body, will be spared the fatigue of protecting University interests in Parliament; while, not having been educated at this University, your Royal Highness will be free from all bias or prepossession as to measures affecting its interests.
- The SPR was the first organization of its kind in the world, its stated purpose being " to approach these varied problems without prejudice or prepossession of any kind, and in the same spirit of exact and unimpassioned enquiry which has enabled science to solve so many problems, once not less obscure nor less hotly debated ."
- Dr . F . C . Gerretson, in his four-volume " History of the Royal Dutch ", heaped praise on Kessler, describing his leadership as necessary for the building of one of the world's major companies : " He was high-strung and passionate, forceful and impervious, a man of strong prepossessions and often difficult to get along with.
- In those books their authors undertook a radical critique of the " prepossessions of the European Enlightenment concerning the nature of human knowing and doing . " In those texts, according to Poteat, " modern culture . . . is under the maximum radical pressure from the author [ who ] . . ., therefore, most vividly discloses sometimes wittingly but more often unwittingly the repertoire of concepts in which both we and the author are immured.
- Murphy's " Historical Introduction to Modern Psychology " ( 1929 ) received a positive review in the " British Medical Journal " which stated " no purely objective record could be as successful as Dr . Gardner Murphy's presentation of the history, which bears evidence everywhere of a judicious choice of material and of such emphasis as is free from any prepossession . " Edwin Boring described it as " an exceptionally good book ".