How To Use Depersonalise In A Sentence

  • I depersonalized from myself and thought that I had embodied the spirit of John Lennon, and spoke to my friends as if I were him. Twenty-three-year-olds shouldn't be writing memoirs (Ch 3)
  • Beth says the goal is to decorate the room, make it more inviting and depersonalize it.
  • Would they disappear in a depersonalized collective? World Wide Mind
  • Enforced shaving of a prisoner's head has long been a systematic tool to 'dehumanize' and 'depersonalize' an individual. 'Bush's Republican Administration Used Torture Routinely' - REPORT
  • To put it straightforwardly, and perhaps a little cynically, in the past children used to be regarded as investments that provided their parents with means of subsistence in old age ... whereas today's anonymous system makes all workers pay for the pensions of all retirees in an utterly depersonalized manner. Have More Children?, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
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  • I remember once a fellow university student complaining on Facebook about how he felt depersonalized online -- being reduced to just a few lists: music I like, movies I like, etc. Dyane Jean François: How Internet Tools Emphasize Our Priorities
  • The people that commit this crime depersonalise it, as humans do not appear to be involved, however the damages can have severe effects on your business as well as your health and well being.
  • The process depersonalizes participants and blurs the precise nature of their roles.
  • Its cadaverous Borg villains are depersonalized members of a cybernetically unified mind. World Wide Mind
  • Finally, technology threatens to depersonalize our lives and increase our ultimate loneliness.
  • Try to depersonalize conflicts. Instead of a "me versus you" mentality, visualize an "us versus the problem" scenario.
  • He thinks that wearing school uniform depersonalizes children.
  • This process depersonalizes participants and tends to blur the exact nature of their roles.
  • He said: ‘The use of medical slang helps to depersonalise the distress encountered in doctors' everyday working lives’.
  • It is true that modern weaponry depersonalised war.
  • The depersonalised character of traditional diagnoses allowed the sufferer to objectify the condition as something ‘out there’, perhaps a somewhat forced abstraction, but one with some pragmatic value.
  • It is true that modern weaponry depersonalised war.
  • "When we consider a human being as a problem, we depersonalize him, we offend his human dignity," he said.
  • While this is not always true, it does exist here and it adds another layer of foggy, depersonalized confusion as to who and watch we are watching.
  • Finally, technology threatens to depersonalize our lives and increase our ultimate loneliness.
  • It is true that modern weaponry depersonalised war.
  • Its cadaverous Borg villains are depersonalized members of a cybernetically unified mind. World Wide Mind
  • The women no longer appear as depersonalized objects flattened by the photographic medium and clinical setting. G. Roger Denson: "Old," "Crazy" and "Hysterical." Is That All There Is?
  • Regardless of what you think about the job (temporary, contractually a quagmire, and possibly vague in its mission) or the campaign (missing some basic social media fundamentals, mysterious in its process, depersonalized), the gimick of the search has splash landed as one of the top 10 topics we wine bloggers talk about. A Summer of Social Media in Wine « California Life: Better Than Happy Hour
  • We are trying to take this increasingly depersonalized, rapid-fire, bureaucratic world and make it feel like home again. Courtney E. Martin: Do It Anyway: The Top 10 Ways that the Next Generation is Shifting Activism
  • As a scientist, I had explored quantum mechanics and come to have misgivings about the depersonalized view of nature I had been raised in.
  • But the overall effect of the poem is one of denial, fabricated intimacy and an insulting treatment of a situation that in our culture has already been spiritualized and depersonalized to death.
  • It may or may not work -- but even if it does, it leaves other GOP senate candidates unfrozen, depersonalized and unpolarized. 'There Is No More Molly'
  • In every war, both sides demonise their enemy to depersonalise them and make it easier for their soldiers to pull the trigger.
  • I shall also contend that this negotiable (or transferable) debt - that is, 'depersonalized' debt that can be used as means of payment to a third party - is a form of money which is specific to capitalism. "(see Ingham 1999). Limited, Inc.
  • I would choose to read the current exhibition as an attempt to address the dissonance between the personhood of the individual and the institutional tendency of states and corporations to depersonalise the individual into a type.
  • This, as the reasoning often continues, is a quite convincing sign of the state of alienation in which individuals in the anonymous, depersonalized western world today find themselves.
  • Will computers depersonalize human interactions?
  • One group of researchers reported that taking care of patients objectively is necessary, but this mode of care also subtly encourages medical staff members to depersonalize them.

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