(n.) Any philosophical doctrine which refers all knowledge to, and founds it upon, any subjective states; egoism.
Example Sentences:
(1) Our follow-up of seven patients with Swanson Lunatum prosthesis showed subjectiv and functional good results whereas the radiological findings weren't satisfactory.
(2) Furthermore it could be shown that the stronger the cylindric power the smaller the axial deviation between subjectiv and automatic refraction.
(3) The "Dioptron" printed out stronger cylindric powers as were found with the subjectiv refraction.
(4) Moral relativism and subjectivism are the wide spread consequences of empirical anthropological theories.
(5) The extremes of objectification and subjectivism as barriers to understanding illness and suffering are explored.
(6) The data collected were subjectived to statistical analysis to establish correlations between certain variables and, on the basis of these variables, the traditional French classification was compared with that of the D.S.M.
(7) Hundred eyes of young patients with an average age of 25 years were measured with two refraction methods: 1. subjectiv refraction and 2. automatic refraction with the "Dioptron".
(8) Diagnosis according to the mentioned mathematical table is more effective, and, besides, there is no subjectivism in the diagnosis.
Subjectivist
Definition:
(n.) One who holds to subjectivism; an egoist.
Example Sentences:
(1) Though certain assumptions about the nature of meaning that I call subjectivist go contrary to the general direction of psychoanalytic thought, they are intrinsic to Freud's view of the unconscious as a special mental system with characteristics unique to it.
(2) Emphasis is placed on the applications and benefits of subjectivist approaches in evaluation.
(3) After Kant's critique of empiricism, subjectivist epistemologies cropped up in 19th-century German philosophy.
(4) He evaluates prominent approaches to the problem of knowledge, particularly those of the "subjectivists" and "relativists," such as Schafer and Spence, and the "empiricists" and "inductivists," such as the proponents of DSM-III.
(5) These psychiatrists had gone along with the subjectivistic trend change with the criticism of traditional associated with this, asymmetric, dyadic doctor-patient relationship.
(6) The subjectivistic (Bayesian) theory of probability is the appropriate framework within which expert opinions, which are essential to the quantification process, can be combined with experimental results and statistical observations to produce quantitative measures of the risks from these systems.