Sentient vs Sensing - What's the difference?
sentient | sensing |
Conscious or self-aware.
Experiencing sensation, thinking, thought, or feeling.
Possessing human-like knowledge and intelligence.
Lifeform with the capability to feel sensation, such as pain.
(chiefly, science fiction) An intelligent, self-aware being.
* {{quote-book
, year = 1965
, first = Philip José
, last = Farmer
, authorlink = Philip José Farmer
, title =
, passage = The merpeople and the sentients who lived on the beach often hitched rides on these creatures, steering them by pressure on exposed nerve centers.
}}
The act of sensation.
* 1987 , Brian Patrick Hendley, Plato, Time, and Education
As nouns the difference between sentient and sensing
is that sentient is lifeform with the capability to feel sensation, such as pain while sensing is the act of sensation.As an adjective sentient
is conscious or self-aware.As a verb sensing is
.sentient
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Antonyms
* insensateNoun
(en noun)Synonyms
* SeeReferences
* * * ----sensing
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- Second, the list of kinds of sensings that Socrates gave was thought to be an odd one. It included pleasures, pains, desires, and fears, as well as the more familiar examples of sight, hearing, smell, and the sensings of cold and of heat.