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WILL |
Volition |
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VOLITIONAL |
Belonging or relating to volition. |
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UNWILLED |
Deprived of the faculty of will or volition. |
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NOLITION |
Adverse action of will; unwillingness; -- opposed to
volition. |
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VELLEITY |
The lowest degree of desire; imperfect or incomplete
volition. |
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CONSENSUAL |
Excited or caused by sensation, sympathy, or reflex
action, and not by conscious volition; as, consensual motions. |
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BRUTE |
Not having sensation; senseless; inanimate; unconscious;
without intelligence or volition; as, the brute earth; the brute powers
of nature. |
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EMANANT |
Issuing or flowing forth; emanating; passing forth into an
act, or making itself apparent by an effect; -- said of mental acts;
as, an emanant volition. |
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CATALEPSIS |
A sudden suspension of sensation and volition, the body
and limbs preserving the position that may be given them, while the
action of the heart and lungs continues. |
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SENSORI-VOLITIONAL |
Concerned both in sensation and volition; --
applied to those nerve fibers which pass to and from the cerebro-spinal
axis, and are respectively concerned in sensation and volition. |
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EXCITO-MOTORY |
...duce
muscular contraction without sensation or volition. ... |
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VEGETAL |
... and animals, in distinction from sensation and volition, which are
peculiar to animals. ... |
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FACULTY |
...kinds of
soul activity, as knowledge, feeling, volition; intellectual endowment
or gift; power; as, faculties of the mind or the soul. ... |
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BRAIN |
...e nervous
system, and the seat of consciousness and volition) which is inclosed
in the cartilaginous or bony cranium of vertebrate animals. It i... |
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COERCION |
...
is the condition of mind which, when there is volition forced by
coercion, annuls the result of such coercion. ... |
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SHALL |
... a
less distinct and positive assertion of his volition than is indicated
by will. "I shall go" implies nearly a simple futurity; more exactly, ... |