transindiˈvidual, a.
[f. trans- 4 + individual a.]
Not confined to any particular thing or person, more than individual. Cf. transpersonal a.
| 1936 Psychol. Monogr. XLVII. i. 8 In Scholastic philosophy these realities are regarded as subsisting in the realm of ideas; they are trans-individual. 1938 Mind XLVII. 482 The right answer to the question ‘What are numerical propositions?’ is that they predicate a peculiar kind of trans-individual quality applicable only to groups. 1973 S. Heath in Screen Spring/Summer 105 The transindividual system or code..of elements and rules underlying and assuring individual messages. 1977 A. Sheridan tr. Lacan's {Eacu}crits iii. 49 Its domain is that of concrete discourse, in so far as this is the field of the transindividual reality of the subject. |