tactuality

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

tactual +‎ -ity

Noun[edit]

tactuality (countable and uncountable, plural tactualities)

  1. The quality of being tactual (relating to the sense of touch); that which concerns or is characterized by touch.
    • 1858, William Robinson Pirie, An Inquiry into the Constitution, Powers, and Processes of the Human Mind, Aberdeen: A. Brown, Chapter 7, p. 398,[1]
      [] we are just as conscious of a cause of vision as of a cause of tactual feeling, and it is not improbable that we have even a sense of tactuality, if we may so speak, in the secondary sensations.
    • 1949, Oets Kolk Bouwsma, “Descartes’ Evil Genius”, in Alexander Sesonske, Noel Fleming, editors, Meta-Meditations: Studies in Descartes[2], Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company, published 1965, page 32:
      Each heard with the same ear what the other heard. For every sniffing of the one nose there were two identical smells, and there were two tactualities for every touch.
    • 1971, Ashley Montagu, chapter 5, in Touching: The Human Significance of the Skin[3], New York: Columbia University Press, page 170:
      [] what [Sigmund Freud] calls infant sexuality appears to be, as Lawrence Frank has observed, largely tactuality.

Synonyms[edit]