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Definition of Feeling of movement
1. Noun. The perception of body position and movement and muscular tensions etc.
Generic synonyms: Somatosense, Somaesthesia, Somaesthesis, Somataesthesis, Somatesthesia, Somatic Sense, Somatic Sensory System, Somatosensory System, Somesthesia, Somesthesis
Derivative terms: Kinaesthetic, Kinesthetic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Feeling Of Movement
Literary usage of Feeling of movement
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Contemporary Review (1893)
"... which corresponds to this feeling of movement 'S connected accordingly by an
association-path with the first ion which gave the impulse to the movement. ..."
2. The Principles of Psychology by William James (1918)
"If I extend my arm straight o^t at the shoulder, the rotation of the shoulder-joint
will give me one feeling of movement; if then I sweep the arm forward, ..."
3. Control Processes in Modified Hand-writing: An Experimental Study by June Etta Downey (1908)
"Throughout, strong feeling of movement and of inhibition of movement ; arm had
weak, ' invalid ' feeling. ... But little feeling of movement inhibition. ..."
4. The Senses and the Intellect by Alexander Bain (1874)
"... is possible that the feeling of movement may consist of the primary feeling
of expended energy (given in its purity in dead resistance), modified by a ..."
5. Harvard Psychological Studies by Harvard Psychological Laboratory (1922)
"He often noted however a peculiar ‘feeling of movement' in addition to the
perception of the two discrete sounds. To quote his introspection: “Sometimes get ..."
6. Problems of Life and Mind by George Henry Lewes (1875)
"Note further, that it is only the óptico-muscular feeling of movement which is
called upon to interpret the objective conditions of sensation ; no sensation ..."
7. The Philosophical Review by Sage School of Philosophy, Cunningham, Gustavus Watts, 1881-, James Edwin Creighton, Frank Thilly, Jacob Gould Schurman (1897)
"Secondly, a feeling of movement or plunge forward occurs. My particular sensations
differ in different cases, but all have this in common : First, ..."
8. Man's Place in the Cosmos: And Other Essays by Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison (1897)
"But as soon as the movement actually takes place, consciousness has something
new before it—namely, the feeling of movement produced in the contracted ..."