If individuals, corporations, and nations can externalize their costs, they will.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I think what I do with film is externalize and visualize my dramatic feelings.
From the suntimes.com
So how do you externalize all those thoughts and experiences and make it cinematic?
From the variety.com
In some, but not all cases, lead cables have been shown to externalize.
From the forbes.com
Psychologists say you externalize them in any one of a number of ways.
From the forbes.com
It is a business trying to externalize costs onto other people in order to increase profits.
From the economist.com
Strict products liability causes manufacturers to internalize costs they would normally externalize.
From the en.wikipedia.org
It might help to externalize the problem.
From the psychcentral.com
Sight Systems, if it was real, would change that disconnect a bit, but it would also externalize even more knowledge.
From the techcrunch.com
More examples
Project: regard as objective
Exteriorize: make external or objective, or give reality to; "language externalizes our thoughts"
(externalization) attributing to outside causes
(externalization) embodying in an outward form
To make something external or objective; To represent something abstract or intangible as material; to embody; To attribute emotions etc to external circumstances; to project; To direct to others, as costs or benefits
(externalized) Preoccupation; awareness temporarily cut off from superconsciousness. A condition monastics seek to avoid through their sadhana and tapas; allowing awareness to become involved in outer life to the exclusion of one's inner life and goals, spiritual unfoldment, purification, ...
(Externalization) The process of putting internal experiences, thoughts or feelings outside oneself and thus putting the responsibility for these experiences, thoughts or feelings on someone else.
(Externalization) Doing business through an external partner (importer, agent, distributor).
(Externalization) seeing something inner as occurring outside instead. A broader term than projection; in externalization, all feelings, even positive ones, are experienced as an aspect of someone or something else, consciously eliminating them from oneself (similar to Klein's concept of ...