The five senses have been the stuff of our cultural imagination for centuries. From the ancient Egyptians to the contemporary yoga-practicing yogis, the senses have been the way people thought about the world.
The human brain has five different sensory (and emotional) centers, and each of them has a distinct function. A person’s brain is the most active in the visual sense, the most active in the auditory sense, the most active in the somatosensory sense, and the least active in the the olfactory sense.
In this article we will take a look at the five senses. We will look at each sense in turn and then discuss how they work together to bring our senses into the world. There are a lot of things we do with our eyes, for example. We see, we hear, we smell, we touch, we taste and feel. The five senses are the sensory branches of this tree and together they bring our whole body, mind, and spirit into the world.
The five senses are the most important of the five branches of the tree on the left. They are the most important sensory processes we have, they are the most powerful, and they are what bring us into the world. As we move through the five senses we are becoming aware of each other. You might think that the five senses are a bunch of unrelated things. Wrong. The five senses can be separated into the five main branches of the tree, the five senses.
The five senses are the five major branches that our body will run through when we move through the seven branches that go beneath it. The five senses are the most important sensory processes we have, they are the most powerful, and they are what bring us into the world. As we move through the five senses we are becoming aware of each other. You might think that the five senses are a bunch of unrelated things. Wrong.
Let’s break out the five senses to see if we can find any patterns. We have five senses. The first is touch. The next is vision, although we would typically use the word “sight” instead. The third is hearing, although we would use the word “sound” instead. The fourth is smell, although we would use the word “smell” instead.
The fifth is taste, although we would use the word taste instead. The sixth is a sense that we might not think of but is closely tied into our brains and is related to our sense of smell. The seventh is all about our gut. This is a sense that the human brain controls to some degree. This is the sense that most people are most aware of, but that we’re not very good at controlling.
The eighth is touch, although we would use the word feel instead. The ninth is sight, although we would use the word see instead. The tenth is our inner voice, and although we would use the word tell instead. This is the sense that we most use to communicate with ourselves.
touch is the tenth sense, and it’s the one that is most often used in fiction as well.