volitional

English

Etymology

volition + -al

Adjective

volitional (comparative more volitional, superlative most volitional)

  1. Of or relating to the volition or will.
    • 1942, Olaf Stapledon, “5, iii”, in Darkness and the Light:
      Little by little the whole subject population of the world was fitted with the instruments of volitional control. The government was now practically omnipotent.
    • 1957, Leo Kanner, Child Psychology, 3rd edition, Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, Part Two, Chapter 4, p. 42:
      Stern and Karl Bühler noticed independently that a child’s first “No” has a volitional meaning and that the significance as a simple denial of fact appears several months afterwards.
  2. Done by conscious, personal choice; not based on external principles; not accidental.

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