Was he there as a neutral observer or to ask serious questions?
2
One observer repeated the process 1 week later to evaluate intraobserver variations.
3
He was ahead of the game the whole way, said one observer.
4
Results: The observer assessed ten LC videos, each involving a different surgeon.
5
We describe a new, observer-independent procedure for identifying boundaries between cortical areas.
1
The power of seeing may depend on the condition of the beholder.
2
The difference between them lies in the elevation of the beholder's eye.
3
He was a natural orator, and impressed the beholder with his superiority.
4
Here her vast magnificence elevated the mind of the beholder to enthusiasm.
5
They also fill the soul of the rapt beholder with adoring wonder.
1
But he does not pretend to have interrogated the lady, the 'percipient'.
2
And the more complex the form, the more percipient and active the spirit.
3
This percipient event is roughly speaking the bodily life of the incarnate mind.
4
The percipient, General Sir Arthur Becher, had seen other uncanny visions.
5
It's precisely as I believed; Doctor Chalmers is an unusually gifted precognitive percipient.
Uso de perceiver en inglés
1
Is the hero defined by the actor or by the perceiver?
2
The flow of knowledge creates both the percept and the perceiver and unites them.
3
The soul is the perceiver and revealer of truth.
4
They propose that beauty, as defined by aesthetic pleasure, is a function of the perceiver's processing dynamics.
5
Everything is either perceiver, perceiving, or the thing perceived; or, as we might say, consciousness, force, or matter.
6
The perceptible supposes the perceiver.
7
If I or you or any other perceiver did not exist, the things would continue to exist all the same.
8
There is no permanent entity as perceiver or knower, but the knowledge-moments are at once the knowledge, the knower and the known.
9
The preregistered directional hypotheses for behavior elicitation and perceiver-elicited similarity were supported for 3 of 5 traits.
10
If the objects are "born with" the senses, it follows that they are born with and appertain to the individual perceiver.
11
That is to say, they were engaged on the production of material objects of various kinds, whose form should be aesthetically significant to the perceiver.
12
The criterion of certitude in any matter of perception is an inner sense in the perceiver that the thing he perceives is external to himself.
13
For example, colour is the result of a transmission from the material object to the perceiver's eye; and what is thus transmitted is not colour.
14
He who knows this Atman, the honey-eater (perceiver and enjoyer of objects), ever near, as the lord of the past and future, fears no more.
15
The more fluently perceivers can mentally process an object, the more positive their aesthetic response.