Sense (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Sensed (?);
p. pr. & vb. n.
Sensing.]
To perceive by the senses; to recognize. [Obs. or
Colloq.]
Is he
sure that objects are not otherwise sensed by
others than they are by him?
Glanvill.
Sense (s&ebreve;ns), n. [L. sensus, from sentire, sensum, to perceive, to feel, from
the same root as E. send; cf. OHG. sin sense, mind, sinnan to go, to journey, G. sinnen to meditate, to think: cf. F.
sens. For the change of
meaning cf. See,
v. t. See Send, and cf. Assent, Consent, Scent,
v. t., Sentence, Sentient.]
1.
(Physiol.) A faculty, possessed by animals, of perceiving external objects
by means of impressions made upon certain organs (sensory or sense organs) of the body, or of perceiving changes in the condition of the body; as,
the senses of sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch. See Muscular sense, under Muscular, and Temperature sense, under Temperature.
Let fancy still my sense in Lethe steep.
Shak. What surmounts the reach
Of human sense I shall delineate.
Milton.
The traitor
Sense recalls
The soaring soul from rest.
Keble. 2. Perception by the sensory organs of the body; sensation; sensibility; feeling.
In a living creature, though never so great, the sense and the affects of any one part
of the body
instantly make a transcursion through the whole.
Bacon. 3. Perception through the intellect; apprehension; recognition; understanding; discernment; appreciation.
This Basilius, having the quick sense of a
lover.
Sir P. Sidney. High disdain from sense of injured merit.
Milton. 4. Sound
perception and reasoning; correct judgment; good mental capacity; understanding; also, that which is
sound, true, or reasonable; rational meaning. "He speaks sense."
Shak.
He raves; his words are loose
As heaps of sand, and scattering wide from sense.
Dryden. 5. That which is felt
or is held as a sentiment, view, or opinion; judgment; notion; opinion.
I speak my private but impartial sense
With freedom.
Roscommon. The municipal council of the city had ceased to speak the sense of the citizens.
Macaulay.
6. Meaning; import; signification;
as, the true
sense of words or phrases; the sense of a
remark.
So they read
in the book
in the law of God distinctly, and gave the sense.
Neh. viii. 8.
I think 't was in another sense.
Shak.
7. Moral perception or appreciation.
Some are so hardened in wickedness as to have no sense of the most friendly offices.
L' Estrange.
8. (Geom.) One of two opposite directions in which a line,
surface, or volume, may be supposed to be
described by the motion of a point, line, or surface.
Common sense, according to Sir W. Hamilton: (a) "The complement of those cognitions or convictions which we receive from nature, which all men possess in common, and by which they
test the truth of knowledge and the morality of actions." (b)
"The faculty of first principles." These two are
the philosophical significations. (c) "Such ordinary complement of intelligence, that,if a person be deficient therein, he is accounted mad or foolish." (d)
When the substantive is emphasized:
"Native practical intelligence, natural
prudence, mother wit, tact in behavior, acuteness in the observation of character, in contrast to habits of acquired learning or of speculation." -- Moral sense. See under Moral, (a).
-- The inner, or internal, sense, capacity of the mind to be aware of its own
states; consciousness; reflection. "This source of ideas every man has
wholly in himself, and though it be
not sense, as having nothing to do
with external objects, yet it is very like it,
and might properly enough be called internal sense." Locke. -- Sense capsule
(Anat.), one of the cartilaginous or bony cavities which inclose, more or less
completely, the organs of smell, sight, and hearing. -- Sense organ (Physiol.), a
specially irritable
mechanism by which some one natural force or form
of energy is enabled to excite sensory nerves; as the eye, ear, an end bulb or tactile corpuscle,
etc. - - Sense organule (Anat.), one of the
modified epithelial cells in or near which the fibers of the sensory nerves terminate.
Syn. -- Understanding;
reason. -- Sense,
Understanding, Reason. Some philosophers have given a
technical signification to these terms, which may here be stated. Sense is the mind's acting in the direct cognition either of material objects or of its own mental states. In the first
case it is
called the outer, in the second
the inner, sense. Understanding is the logical faculty, i. e., the power of apprehending under general conceptions, or the power
of classifying, arranging, and making deductions. Reason is the power of
apprehending those first or fundamental truths or principles which are the conditions of all real and scientific knowledge, and which control the mind in all its processes of investigation and deduction. These distinctions are given, not as
established, but simply because they often occur in writers of the
present day.