Aesthesiophysiology


aesthesiophysiology

aesthesiophysiology aes·the·si·o·phys·i·ol·o·gy or es·the·si·o·phys·i·ol·o·gy (ěs-thē’zē-ō-fĭz’ē-ŏl’ə-jē)
n.
The physiology of sensation and the sense organs.

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    aesthesioneurosis aesthesioneurosis aes·the·si·o·neu·ro·sis or es·the·si·o·neu·ro·sis (ěs-thē’zē-ō-nu-rō’sĭs, -nyu-) n. Any sensory neurosis, for example, anesthesia or hyperesthesia.

  • Aesthesis

    . sensation; feeling. noun the normal ability to experience sensation, perception, or sensitivity aesthesia aes·the·sia or es·the·sia (ěs-thē’zhə) n. The ability to feel or perceive.

  • Aesthete

    a person who has or professes to have refined sensitivity toward the beauties of art or nature. a person who affects great love of art, music, poetry, etc., and indifference to practical matters. Contemporary Examples He makes people who I call the aesthete—who have a very specific aesthetic point of view. Louboutin Looks Back Isabel […]

  • Aesthetic
  • Aesthetic distance

    a degree of detachment from or nonidentification with the characters or circumstances of a work of art, permitting the formation of judgments based on aesthetic rather than extra-aesthetic criteria. Historical Examples But Johnson of Cheshire lacked the aesthetic distance required of sustained irony and had a grander purpose in mind. The Merry-Thought: or the Glass-Window […]


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