Either everything was sentient along with me, or we were all sharing a vital insentience. |
It may lack some of the epistolary poetry of, say, Paul's first letter to the Corinthians, and the style is plain almost to the point of insentience. |
How has personal insentience changed in our society during the past two centuries? |
But here too the central argument is the inseparable intersubsumption of the two opposite terms: sentience is always insentience-sentience, insentience is always sentience-insentience. |
We may be battered practically into insentience, and we may simultaneously be hurting beyond what anyone could imagine. |
He was not downcast for he could propel himself in a bath chair, yet he was a blank of insentience. |