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Aesthesia or paresthesia (altered sensation such as numbness or pins and needles) in the distribution of the mental nerve.
The English word is a compound of the prefix radi(o)-, referring to radiation and the rare term aesthesia meaning "perception by the senses", or "the capacity for feeling or sensation", which comes from the ancient Greek aisthesis "a perceiving".
Pictures based on his own ideas, the common element in this group is aesthesis.
It derived from the Greek aesthesis meaning "sense perception".
"Syn"+"aesthesis" denoting "co-perceiving", implies the association of two sensory elements with little connection to the cognitive level.
Dysesthesia (dysaesthesia) comes from the Greek word "dys", meaning "not-normal" and "aesthesis", which means "sensation" (abnormal sensation).
(also spelled synæsthesia, synaesthesia, or synesthesia-plural synesthesiae) - from the Greek syn- meaning union and aesthesis meaning sensation-is a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled.
Kant's Transcendental Aesthetic deals with sensibility and with objects as far as they can be perceived, the word aesthetic being derived from the Greek root "aesthesis" meaning capable of sensation or feeling.
Art is immanent in the sense that its truth is given in its immediacy in a given work of art, and singular in that its truth is found in art and art alone-hence reviving the ancient materialist concept of "aesthesis".