prehension

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See also: préhension

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Latin prehensio, prehensionis. Doublet of prison.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

prehension (countable and uncountable, plural prehensions)

  1. The act of grasping or gripping, especially with the hands.
  2. (philosophy) According to Alfred North Whitehead, a type of universally acting perception that is not limited to living, self-conscious beings, and which involves an interconnectedness of the observer and the observed.
    • 1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 214:
      The addiction to punning was related to a reverence for the "Word." In a pun or a hieroglyphic figure, several lines come together in what Whitehead would call "a prehension"; in the comprehension of an event, that sympathetic resonance between the observor and the "thing" observed, there is a correspondence between the cosmic word of the gods (the Logos of St. John) and the inner words of the human mind, for each shares existence because it is a manifestation of divine laws and harmony.

Related terms[edit]