verb
- to make objective; to treat or present as an object rather than a subject
- to express or represent in objective form; to give concrete or material form to an idea or concept
Usage: chiefly British spelling; American English typically uses 'objectivize'; formal or academic usage
Usage: philosophy, psychology, and academic contexts
Examples
- The artist sought to objectivise her emotions through sculpture.
- Researchers must objectivise their observations to ensure scientific validity.
- The theory attempts to objectivise abstract philosophical concepts.
- By documenting the process, we can objectivise what was previously intuitive.
- The study objectivises customer satisfaction through measurable metrics.
- Philosophers debate whether consciousness can ever be fully objectivised.