Five Senses Essay

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    within the sand, boldly with his chest towards the crashing waves and warmth of the sun, grasping his undoubtedly sandy surfboard, while breathing in and tasting the thick salt of the sea as he hears the waves tumble towards him evokes each of the five senses. Although the scene is black and white, the various hues of the ocean water can be seen with such clarity. The whitewater, filled with turbulent air, sitting atop the large crashing wave shines brightly and glimmers in the abundant sunlight. The

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    Eyesight is the most important of the five senses. The world today revolves around being able to see and understand things. As the average age of the world continues to increase, glaucoma has become increasingly prevalent in the population. Glaucoma currently affects around sixty million people worldwide and is expected to affect eleven million people in two thousand twenty(Mohammadi et al. 3). Losing the gift of sight is unbearable to most people, but glaucoma can be treated if it is caught early

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    What was once called the African golden jackal, now has a new name, thanks to the work of Klaus-Peter Keopfli of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, who recently discovered that the jackal isn’t really a jackal at all, but an entirely separate species of wolf. His curiosity, spurred by a 2012 paper published by Philippe Gaubert, a bilogist at the University of Montpellier in France, Koepfli wanted to test Gaubert’s findings that African golden jackals were a subspecies of gray wolf.

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    Jusepe de Ribera’s The Five Senses: Touch (Museum of Fine Arts, Houston) of 1615-16, in its simplest description, is characterized as a man with closed eyes; sitting in a dark room, behind a table with a painting on top; and holding the head of a sculpture in his hands. Contrasts between light and shadow cut through the simple images and draw viewers into this painting, as the artist explores relationships between sight and touch. Within the painting, Jusepe de Ribera included the image of another

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    today I will share with you six ideas that will help you create stories to dazzle audiences. Number 1: Go beyond the five sense. Most writers know enough to put in sensations beyond sight and sound. It’s always great to read about a character who takes note of the hot metal and oil aroma that lingers over the rails after a fast train has passed. Agents and editors love the five sense, but they want and expect more.

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    Fire Sense Analysis

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    The fire sense can be a extremely fun concepts for students to learn. it is a lesson that is all about them and what their bodies can do. The first image I have to represent that five sense illustrates a broad overview of the senses and what body parts they involve. I will blow this image up and use it as a chart of reference to hang in the classroom. The video is a fun song about the five sense that will make it much more playful to learn about. The next five vocabulary words are all connected to

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    information that obtained through the five senses (touch, smell, sight, taste, and hearing). Although, he describes that the senses can also be deceived. For example, the initiation of an image when we experience mirages, or seeing hallucinations after taking meditation. Ideally, he argues that the simple 5 senses are not reliable as well. He then moves to the idea of God and religion, and that there is an evil deceiver or demon that is responsible for his deceived senses. He justifies that God is good

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    Our imagination serves us like a pair of shoes that lets us step into their world. The more we walk in their shoes, the more we know their world, and what is really in it. However, people tend to restrict reality and define it only using their five senses. Yet, this argument fails when it comes to explaining feelings that other people have experienced. This can be seen in the book, Swamplandia, when one tries to analyze the reality of Ossie’s world and the people in it. It’s clear to see that Louis

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    Meditation Five, Descarte states that God existed because he has prior knowledge of materialistic things. He states that he recalls objects without prior knowledge of them, and that everyone perceives all the objects in the same type of manner. In the end of the mediation he closes it out by stating that, we all can think of non existent things with the same idea of what they are without them existing, thus proving that God exists in some manner, creating us with this information. In Meditation Five, Descarte

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    say here you go with your five senses. “Why so violent Sufian?” you might wonder and i genuinely apologize for using some violent words that might be inappropriate for a class blog, but it’s something that I need to get out of my system one way or another. Better blogging than demonstrating right? (A side note for future employees as Andrew warned us: This is meant to prove a point and no violence is actually intended. Thank you! And hire me) “Why are there only five senses?”, I asked my second grade

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