Two things your post makes me think about, tangentially:
Storge, as appreciated by C.S. Lewis Suzette Haden Elgin's understanding and discussion of touch-dominant people-- people whose most fundamentally integral sense is touch, and who not only typically really need touch, but are better served by communication in figurative language based on touch. (Which is unfortunately rare in English.)
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Two things your post makes me think about, tangentially:
Storge, as appreciated by C.S. Lewis
Suzette Haden Elgin's understanding and discussion of touch-dominant people-- people whose most fundamentally integral sense is touch, and who not only typically really need touch, but are better served by communication in figurative language based on touch. (Which is unfortunately rare in English.)