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| Alphabetical [« »] self-identical 1 sensation 9 sensations 1 sense 59 sense-faculty 1 sense-organ 1 sense-perception 17 | Frequency [« »] 66 with 63 when 59 if 59 sense 59 some 58 must 58 object | Aristotle On Sense and the Sensible IntraText - Concordances sense |
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1 [Title]| On Sense and the Sensible~ 2 1 | the act of perceiving by sense, and the reason why this 3 1 | effects, is the superior sense; but for developing intelligence, 4 1 | whence it is through this sense especially that we perceive 5 1 | destitute from birth of either sense, the blind are more intelligent 6 2 | each of the faculties of sense enough has been said already.~ 7 2 | loss respecting the fifth sense. But they hold the organ 8 2 | consists of air, and that the sense of smell consists of fire. ( 9 2 | consists of fire. (I say the sense of smell, not the organ.) 10 2 | potentially that which the sense of smell, as realized, is 11 2 | actually; since the object of sense is what causes the actualization 12 2 | the actualization of each sense, so that it (the sense) 13 2 | each sense, so that it (the sense) must (at the instant of 14 2 | of the bodily organs of sense must be determined.~ 15 3 | the Soul explained in what sense the colour, or sound, regarded 16 3 | the same as, and in what sense it is different from, the 17 3 | to [the weakness of our] sense, are imperceptible by us, 18 4 | which is that the olfactory sense of man is inferior in acuteness 19 4 | the least perfect of Man’s sense of Touch, on the contrary, 20 4 | capable of transforming the sense of Taste from potentiality 21 4 | represent all objects of sense as objects of Touch. Yet, 22 4 | proper sensibles; e.g. the sense of Seeing is not deceived 23 4 | figures. Yet surely no one sense, or, if any, the sense of 24 4 | one sense, or, if any, the sense of Sight rather than any 25 4 | But if we suppose that the sense of Taste is better able 26 4 | sense-Taste should have been the sense which best perceived the 27 5 | a different province of sense, precisely what the Dry 28 5 | creatures also have the sense of smell.~Again, the exhalation 29 5 | We must here define the sense in which these species are 30 5 | into beverages deforce our sense of pleasure by habituating 31 5 | creation of two organs of sense; for in the fact that they 32 5 | respire have the olfactory sense is evident. For fishes, 33 5 | nutrition, a keen olfactory sense of their proper food from 34 5 | respires, and yet they have the sense of smell—unless, indeed, 35 5 | indeed, they have some other sense not included in the ordinary 36 5 | however, impossible. For any sense which perceives odour is 37 5 | which perceives odour is a sense of smell, and this they 38 5 | always a middle unit, the sense of smell occupies in itself 39 5 | that creatures have the sense of smell both in air and 40 5 | must be our account of the sense in which one is or is not 41 6 | case of other objects of sense, extremely small constituents 42 6 | succeed in catching the sense of what is said is evidently 43 7 | to discern each object of sense when in its simple form 44 7 | which belong to different sense provinces (for only those 45 7 | coinstantaneously with one and the same sense.~But if it be thus impossible 46 7 | in the same province of sense if they are really two, 47 7 | discriminating faculty of sense together with [the unity 48 7 | example, is this; the same sense no doubt discerns White 49 7 | and so, too, a faculty of sense self-identical, but different 50 7 | Again, if the stimuli of sense derived from Contraries 51 7 | in the other provinces of sense; for example, of savours, 52 7 | in different provinces of sense (e.g. I call Sweet and White 53 7 | perceives it, unless in the sense that in some part of the 54 7 | same continuum, only in the sense that he does so in some 55 7 | another, i.e. indivisible in a sense consistent with its being 56 7 | objects of one and the same sense, e.g. Sight, if we assume 57 7 | simultaneous perception with one sense) is what emerges from the 58 7 | Soul, co-operating in each sense, to discern different objects 59 7 | time sensibles of the same sense, a fortiori it is not thus