Abstract :
Recent years have seen the growth of a new and newly self-conscious cultural historiography
of the senses. This article extends and critiques this literature through a case study of the sensory work and
worlds of Sir John Floyer, a physician active in Lichfield during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth
centuries. Floyer is best known for his work on pulse-taking, something which he described as contributing to
the art of feeling. Less well known is his first book – a discussion of the tastes of the world and their
therapeutic possibilities. The article explicates, contextualizes, and relates these two books and uses this
analysis to suggest ways of refining and developing the wider historiography of the senses. It demonstrates
how they reveal that what Floyer sensed was closely bound up with the changing ways in which he sensed,
particularly when he began feeling the pulse in a ‘ Chinese ’ style. This, the article concludes, suggests that
historians of the senses need fundamentally to reconsider the model of culture which underpins their work,
focusing less on the ways in which people have interpreted or ordered sensory stimuli, and rather analysing the
senses as forms of skill or dynamic ways of engaging with the world.