How To Use Sensorium In A Sentence

  • Mr. Chairman and prize goose, -- The feelings which now agitate my sensorium on this Michaelmasian occasion stimulate the vibratetiuncles of the heartiean hypothesis, so as to paralyse the oracular and articulative apparatus of my loquacious confirmation, overwhelming my soul-fraught imagination, as the boiling streams of liquid lava, buried in one vast cinereous mausoleum -- the palace-crowded city of the engulphed Pompeii. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, October 2, 1841
  • Back in the sensorium, the attendant technicians peel adhesive sensors from his chest, temples, groin.
  • That no one is any longer made accountable, that the kind of being manifested cannot be traced back to a causa prima, that the world is a unity neither as sensorium nor as ‘spirit’, this alone is the great liberation. Nietzsche the Pantheist? | Heretical Ideas Magazine
  • Patients with alcoholic hallucinosis experience visual, auditory, or tactile hallucinations but otherwise have a clear sensorium.
  • She enlarges perceptively upon the primacy of the visual in the shifting sensorium of the modern urban subject, though we still need more appreciation of other neglected dimensions, notably of sound and touch.
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  • The word sensorium is used to express not only the medullary part of the brain, spinal marrow, nerves, organs of sense and muscles, but also at the same time that living principle, or spirit of animation, which resides throughout the body, without being cognizable to our senses except by its effects. additional notes contents table of contents Note II
  • The sensorium and motorium of these cognitive systems will be the infrastructure of the world. Scientific American
  • Yet this connection between the sensorium and the motorium is not yet stable, for there follows not seldom upon a command distinctly uttered, and without doubt correctly understood, the wrong movement -- paramimy. The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
  • Invention is an operation of the sensorium, by which we voluntarily continue to excite one train of ideas, suppose the design of raising water by a machine; and at the same time attend to all other ideas, which are connected with this by every kind of catenation; and combine or separate them voluntarily for the purpose of obtaining some end. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • The word sensorium is used to express not only the medullary part of the brain, spinal marrow, nerves, organs of sense and muscles, but also at the same time that living principle, or spirit of animation, which resides throughout the body, without being cognizable to our senses except by its effects. The Temple of Nature; or, the Origin of Society A Poem, with Philosophical Notes
  • These four faculties of the sensorium during their inactive state are termed irritability, sensibility, voluntarity, and associability; in their active state they are termed as above, irritation, sensation, volition, association. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • That exertion or change of the sensorium, which is caused by the appulses of external bodies, either simply subsides, or is succeeded by sensation, or it produces fibrous motions; it is termed irritation, and irritative motions are those contractions of the muscular fibres, or of the organs of sense, that are immediately consequent to this exertion or change of the sensorium. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • Farkas beamed pleasantly, leaned forward, let his whole sensorium drink her in.
  • In normal intact sensorium without redirection of associative memory, statistically significant findings will indicate a probability of effective reporting based upon a previous baseline, just as is established with regard to galvanic responses, respirations, pupilary reactions, blood pressure, and pulse, in contemporary "Lie Detection" monitoring. Mind Hacks: NPR on brain scan lie detection
  • These sensitive, impression-receiving ends constitute together what is called the "sensorium" of the body. Applied Psychology: Making Your Own World Being the Second of a Series of Twelve Volumes on the Applications of Psychology to the Problems of Personal and Business Efficiency
  • When severe, this withdrawal is characterized by tremor, restlessness, perceptual disturbances, disorientation, and clouded sensorium. The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry
  • These four faculties of the sensorium during their inactive state are termed irritability, sensibility, voluntarity, and associability; in their active state they are termed as above irritation, sensation, volition, association. Note II
  • Although tragically limited, these very limits of theoretical insights do not impinge in any way on the full beauty of experience: experience can outstrip mere information because it always plays through our complete sensorium.
  • These four faculties of the sensorium during their inactive state are termed irritability, sensibility, voluntarily, and associability; in their active state they are termed as above irritation, sensation, volition, association. The Temple of Nature; or, the Origin of Society A Poem, with Philosophical Notes
  • Over the next two days her confusion continued to diminish and she again returned to her baseline sensorium of completely intact cognitive function.
  • If it is the fact that a certain quantity of phosphorus is expended in the work of the brain, it would be difficult to say how many milligrammes the judge had parted with to excite the network of his "sensorium," and after all, to find out nothing, absolutely nothing. Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon
  • The desire of this position lies in its ambition to reach into the structures that produce history and the sensorium, thereby arriving at a means of generating histories and sensoria, potentially for all. Seeing Is Reading
  • Establish a baseline of sensorium and cognitive function before sedating the patient.
  • But I did have a period in which for about two weeks, when I actually wasn't taking anything, when something seemed to happen to my sensorium. Oliver Sacks: A Neurologist Examines 'The Mind's Eye'

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