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FIVE PHYSICAL AND FIVE SPIRITUAL POWERS |
In man five outer powers exist, which are the agents of perception,
that is to say, through these five powers man perceives
material beings. These are sight, which perceives visible forms;
hearing, which perceives audible sounds; smell, which perceives
odors; taste, which perceives foods; and feeling, which is in all
parts of the body, and perceives tangible things. These five powers
perceive outward existences.
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Man has also spiritual powers: imagination, which conceives
things; thought, which reflects upon realities; comprehension,
which comprehends realities, memory, which retains whatever man
imagines, thinks, and comprehends. The intermediary between
the five outward powers and the inward powers, is the sense which
they possess in common, that is to say, the sense which acts between
the outer and inner powers, conveys to the inward powers
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whatever the outer powers discern. It is termed the common
faculty, because it communicates between the outward and
inward powers, and thus is common to the outward and inward
powers.
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For instance, sight is one of the outer powers; it sees and perceives
this flower, and conveys this perception to the inner power—the common faculty—which transmits this perception to the
power of imagination, which in its turn conceives and forms this
image and transmits it to the power of thought; the power of
thought reflects, and having grasped the reality, conveys it to the
power of comprehension; the comprehension, when it has comprehended
it, delivers the image of the object perceived to the
memory, and the memory keeps it in its repository.
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