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- Five_wits abstract "In the time of William Shakespeare, there were commonly reckoned to be five wits and five senses. The five wits were sometimes taken to be synonymous with the five senses, but were otherwise also known and regarded as the five inward wits, distinguishing them from the five senses, which were the five outward wits.Much of this conflation has resulted from changes in meaning. In Early Modern English, "wit" and "sense" overlapped in meaning. Both could mean a faculty of perception (although this sense dropped from the word "wit" during the 17th century). Thus "five wits" and "five senses" could describe both groups of wits/senses, the inward and the outward, although the common distinction, where it was made, was "five wits" for the inward and "five senses" for the outward.The inward and outward wits are a product of many centuries of philosophical and psychological thought, over which the concepts gradually developed, that have their origins in the works of Aristotle (who only defined four senses, however). The concept of five outward wits came to medieval thinking from Classical philosophy, and found its most major expression in Christian devotional literature of the Middle Ages. The concept of five inward wits similarly came from Classical views on psychology.Modern thinking is that there are more than five (outward) senses, and the idea that there are five (corresponding to the gross anatomical features — eyes, ears, nose, skin, and mouth — of many higher animals) does not stand up to scientific scrutiny. (For more on this, see Definition of sense.) But the idea of five senses/wits from Aristotelian, medieval, and 16th century thought still lingers so strongly in modern thinking that a sense beyond the natural ones is still called a "sixth sense".".
- Five_wits wikiPageExternalLink The-Five-Wits.html.
- Five_wits wikiPageExternalLink view-works.cgi?c=hawesste.812&pos=5.
- Five_wits wikiPageExternalLink the%20five%20wits.
- Five_wits wikiPageExternalLink sggk.htm.
- Five_wits wikiPageID "22635285".
- Five_wits wikiPageLength "12865".
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- Five_wits wikiPageRevisionID "651886013".
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Alexandria.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Anicius_Manlius_Severinus_Boethius.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Augustine_of_Hippo.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Aulus_Gellius.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Boethius.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Carthage.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_philosophy.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophical_concepts.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Christian_devotional_literature.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Common_sense.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Consolation_of_Philosophy.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Cursor_Mundi.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink De_Anima.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Democritus.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Devotional_literature.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Early_Modern_English.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Geoffrey_Chaucer.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Instinct.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink John_Bromyard.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink King_Lear.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Literary_topos.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Middle_English.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Much_Ado_About_Nothing.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Old_English.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink On_the_Heavens.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink On_the_Soul.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Damian.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Platonic_ideal.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Rolle.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Dodsley.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Romeo_and_Juliet.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Second_Book_of_Enoch.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Sense.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Sense_and_Sensibilia_(Aristotle).
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Sensus_communis.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Sonnet_141.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Hawes.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink The_Consolation_of_Philosophy.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Theaetetus_(dialogue).
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Theory_of_Forms.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Twelfth_Night.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:sense.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:wit.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink William_Shakespeare.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLink Wynkyn_de_Worde.
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLinkText "Five wits".
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLinkText "five senses".
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLinkText "five specialized".
- Five_wits wikiPageWikiLinkText "five wits".
- Five_wits align "right".
- Five_wits hasPhotoCollection Five_wits.
- Five_wits quote "Age: Of the .v. wittes I wolde have knowynge. Persuerance: Forsoth, syr, herynge, seying, and smellying, The remenaunte tastynge and felyng: These ben the .v. wittes bodely, And, syr, other v. wittes there ben. Age: Syr perseveraunce I know not them. Persuerance: Now, repentaunce, I shell you ken. They are the power of the soule: Clere in mynde, there is one, Imagynacyon, and all reason, Understondynge, and compassyon: These belonge unto perseveraunce.".
- Five_wits quote "Hering, sight, smelling and fele, cheuing er wittes five, All sal be tint er sal pas, quen þe hert sal riue.".
- Five_wits quote "These are the v. wyttes remeuing inwardly: Fyrst, commyn wytte, and than ymaginacyon, Fantasy, and estymacyon truely, And memory, as I make narracyon; Each upon other hath occupacyon.".
- Five_wits sign Geoffrey_Chaucer.
- Five_wits sign Richard_Rolle.
- Five_wits sign "King Henry The Eighth's Primer, 1546".
- Five_wits sign "Larke".
- Five_wits source "Book of Wisdom".
- Five_wits source "Cursor Mundi, lines 17017–17020".
- Five_wits source "Stephen Hawes, The Pastime Of Pleasure, XXIV "Of the Five Internall Wittes"".
- Five_wits source "The Parson's Tale".
- Five_wits source "The World and the Chylde, printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1522 and reprinted on page 334 in volume 12 of Robert Dodsley's Old Plays".
- Five_wits text "And this knowledge descendeth and cometh of the five corporal senses and wits of the persons, as the eyes, understanding, and hearing of the ears, smell of the nose, taste of the mouth, […]".
- Five_wits text "And þus were all þy five wittes occupied with peyne to bote þe trespas of our v witties. In þy syght þou were blyndfeled, […]. In þi smellynge […]. In þy tast, […]. In hyrynge, […]. In felynge, […].".
- Five_wits text "My five wits have I fondly misused and spent, in hearing, seeing, smelling, tasting, and also feeling, which thou has given me […]".
- Five_wits text "the fyve wittes, that been sighte, herynge, smellynge, tastynge or savourynge, and feelynge".
- Five_wits width "30.0".
- Five_wits wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Five_wits wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Five_wits wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Five_wits wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote_box.
- Five_wits subject Category:Medieval_philosophy.
- Five_wits subject Category:Philosophical_concepts.
- Five_wits type Concept.
- Five_wits comment "In the time of William Shakespeare, there were commonly reckoned to be five wits and five senses. The five wits were sometimes taken to be synonymous with the five senses, but were otherwise also known and regarded as the five inward wits, distinguishing them from the five senses, which were the five outward wits.Much of this conflation has resulted from changes in meaning. In Early Modern English, "wit" and "sense" overlapped in meaning.".
- Five_wits label "Five wits".
- Five_wits sameAs m.05zk6xd.
- Five_wits sameAs Q5456270.
- Five_wits sameAs Q5456270.
- Five_wits wasDerivedFrom Five_wits?oldid=651886013.
- Five_wits isPrimaryTopicOf Five_wits.