| Jamie Mayerfeld - Philosophy - 1999 - 252 pages
...is that we must distinguish between the kind of feeling that one doesn't realise how much savour u smell. You smell people, you smell books, you smell the city, you smell the spring — maybe noi consciously, but as a rich imconscious background to everything else. My whole... | |
| Drew V. McDermott - Computers - 2001 - 292 pages
...He then cites a case from Sacks (1987, p. 159) of a person who lost the sense of smell and reported, "Life lost a good deal of its savour—one doesn't...as a rich unconscious background to anything else." Tye concludes that this example supports "the view that phenomenally conscious states need not be conscious... | |
| Tristram D. Wyatt - Medical - 2003 - 412 pages
...like being struck blind. Life lost a good deal of its savor - one doesn't realise how much 'savor' is smell. You smell people, you smell books, you smell the city, you smell the spring - maybe not consciously, but as a rich unconscious 27I Fig. 13.1. Olfaction is important in... | |
| |