See double sensation on Wiktionary
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"A concept, primarily from Edmund Husserl, describing the experience of touching oneself (e.g., one hand touching the other), where one hand is both the toucher (subject) and the touched (object) simultaneously, revealing the body's unique capacity to be both sensing and sensed."
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"(philosophy) A concept, primarily from Edmund Husserl, describing the experience of touching oneself (e.g., one hand touching the other), where one hand is both the toucher (subject) and the touched (object) simultaneously, revealing the body's unique capacity to be both sensing and sensed."
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"The involuntary blending or combination of two senses, where one sensory input triggers an automatic, simultaneous experience in another sense, like seeing colors when hearing music (chromesthesia) or tasting words (lexical-gustatory); a form of sensory cross-wiring, where a stimulus normally processed by one pathway is also routed through another, creating a unified or intensified sensory event."
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"(in synesthesia) The involuntary blending or combination of two senses, where one sensory input triggers an automatic, simultaneous experience in another sense, like seeing colors when hearing music (chromesthesia) or tasting words (lexical-gustatory); a form of sensory cross-wiring, where a stimulus normally processed by one pathway is also routed through another, creating a unified or intensified sensory event."
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Download raw JSONL data for double sensation meaning in All languages combined (2.3kB)
This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2026-01-03 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2026-01-01 using wiktextract (96027d6 and 9905b1f). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.