1 It's a playful, psychological idea.
2 They have a psychology of their own, brother.
3 One can show from the psychological data alone how to get on the track of the real man.
4 You said just now you have nothing but psychology to go on, yet now you've gone on mathematics.
5 He brings in his psychology, too; one has to consider him, too, for it's a matter of life and death.
6 "Yes, in our legal practice there was a case almost exactly similar, a case of morbid psychology," Porfiry went on quickly.
7 If I only had a fact, I thought, the least little fact to go upon, something I could lay hold of, something tangible, not merely psychological.
8 I will confess something psychologically curious about that: just now, defending my love for Avdotya Romanovna, I said I was myself the victim.
9 Finally some of the lawyers more versed in psychology admitted that it was possible he had really not looked into the purse, and so didn't know what was in it when he hid it under the stone.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 10 We will make a clean sweep of all these psychological points, of a suspicion against you, so that your crime will appear to have been something like an aberration, for in truth it was an aberration.
11 And I have myself admitted candidly several times already that that psychology can be taken in two ways and that the second way is stronger and looks far more probable, and that apart from that I have as yet nothing against you.