sensory faculty
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: The inherent mental or physical power of an organism to perceive and process information from the external environment through specialized systems. It refers to the biological capacity for sensation.
Usage
The term "sensory faculty" is a formal, often academic, compound noun used to describe the collective or individual capabilities for receiving sensory input. It is typically used in discussions of physiology, psychology, philosophy of mind, and cognitive science.
Examples
- The accident impaired his primary sensory faculties, making it difficult to navigate the world.
- Philosophers have long debated whether sensory faculties provide a true representation of reality.
- Bats possess a remarkable sensory faculty known as echolocation.
Advanced Usage
- The phrase can be used in a singular form to refer to a specific sense (e.g., vision as a sensory faculty) or in the plural to refer to all senses collectively.
- It is often contrasted with cognitive or rational faculties, which involve thinking and reasoning rather than direct perception.
Variants and Related Words
- Sense (n): A more common and general term for any of the faculties (sight, hearing, etc.) by which stimuli are perceived.
- Sensation (n): The process or experience of perceiving through the senses; a physical feeling.
- Perception (n): The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information.
- Modality (n): A specific type of sensation, such as vision or audition.
Synonyms
- Sense
- Perceptual faculty
- Modality
Antonyms
- Cognitive faculty
- Rational faculty
- Intellect
Related Phrases and Concepts
- Sensory deprivation: The deliberate reduction or removal of stimuli from one or more sensory faculties.
- Sensory processing: The way the nervous system receives and interprets messages from the sensory faculties.
Noun
- the faculty through which the external world is apprehended
- in the dark he had to depend on touch and on his senses of smell and hearing