English

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Etymology

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From extrospect +‎ -ive.

Adjective

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extrospective (comparative more extrospective, superlative most extrospective)

  1. Involving extrospection.
    • 1982, Adrian C. Moulyn, The Meaning of Suffering, page 57:
      In short, the physician shifts from proceeding mostly by the extrospective route toward a combined extrospective and introspective approach toward the patient as a whole human being, thus building toward a person to person, doctor-patient relationship.
    • 2013, Ronald R. Lee, J. Colby Martin, Psychotherapy After Kohut: A Textbook of Self Psychology, page 107:
      When it comes to understanding the subjective self, Kohut (1959) sees the introspective and extrospective methods as unequal in value.