extroversion

See also: extroversión

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From extrovert + -sion, a variant of extraversion popularized in psychology by Phyllis Blanchard's use of extrovert in her 1918 "Psycho-Analytic Study of August Comte".

Noun

extroversion (usually uncountable, plural extroversions)

  1. The state or quality of being extroverted or an extrovert, particularly:
    1. (religion, obsolete) Consideration of the material world as an aid to spiritual insight.
      • 1656, Thomas Blount, Glossographia, s.v. "Extroversion":
        in mystical Divinity... a scattering or distracting ones thoughts upon exterior objects.
      • 1788, John Wesley, Works, Vol. VI, p. 451:
        The turning of the eye of the mind from [Christ] to outward things [mystics] call Extroversion.
    2. (medicine) The condition of being inside out, especially in relation to the bladder.
      • 1835, Robert Bentley Todd, ed., The Cyclopaedia of Anatomy and Physiology, Vol. I, p. 391:
        In extroversion of the bladder the anterior part of this organ is more or less completely wanting.
    3. (informal psychology) A personality orientation towards others and things outside oneself; behavior expressing such orientation.
      • 1920, Arthur George Tansley, The New Psychology and Its Relation to Life, p. 88:
        Extroversion is the thrusting out of the mind on to life, the use of the mind in practical affairs, the pouring out of the libido on external objects.
      • 1999, Ben Brantley, "‘The Dead’: a Musical That Dares to be Quiet," New York Times, 29 Oct.:
        In a genre characterized by brassy extroversion, The Dead is a quiet revolutionary: a musical that dares to be diffident.
Usage notes

Technical papers in psychology overwhelmingly prefer the form extraversion used by Carl Jung, although the variant extroversion is more common in general use.

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