Well, I could be wrong and this is just a guess, but I would suspect their dreams are probably pretty similar to the way they experience life in the daytime (sounds, touch, smell). The only way to know for sure is to ask somebody who was blind from birth though.
2007-03-12 04:31:06
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answer #1
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answered by zyllee 5
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Dreams are responses from visual images. It depends how the blind person visualises various things. If a blind person had never been in contact with another human being then they could only describe things as they imagine them to be. I doubt very much if they would dream of a blue sky or green sea if these had never been described to them. We see the colour but they could never possibly see the colour that you and I see because we share vision in common, although men and women see hues of colour differently. If you had never seen a dog but heard the bark how would you describe it's appearance. I believe that someone did this with an elephant once, allowing blindfolded people to touch the elephant in various places and then give a description of what type of animal it was quite amusing answers.
2007-03-18 00:30:39
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answer #2
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answered by Dr Paul D 5
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That's hard. Being blind from birth, you have never really seen anything. that person would try to really imagine their life if they could see, what the world looks like, the faces of loved ones, etc... They would take these thoughts to their dreams. their dreams are a source of hope... away from their blindness, even very shortly.
;)
2007-03-19 00:51:27
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answer #3
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answered by Lanz 2
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Actually, I read somewhere that blind people can not dream because our dreams are based visually on what we see every day. If we see something, it's easier to make it into a dream. The good news is that there are no nightmares.
2007-03-12 05:04:44
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answer #4
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answered by nicoleblingy2003 4
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I have never flapped my arms and flown in my life but in my dreams I can do it and I perceive the world disappearing beneath me and everything appearing smaller.
I would think that blind people would dream of running for ages without hitting anything or something or maybe a feeling of the wind rushing past them without the feeling of putting in any effort.
We all have similar dreams of freedom or lack there of, but we do it in differing amounts.
I guess a blind person would be no different yet they would dream with the sensory perceptions that they can relate to.
As would anybody with any kind of sensory inability.
2007-03-12 04:38:27
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answer #5
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answered by Shane 3
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Dreaming is a organic element that occurs throughout speedy Eye circulate sleep. It occurs to easily every person, blind or no longer. to be attentive to whether a individual blind from beginning 'sees' something at the same time as dreaming, a researcher might use some variety of neuroimaging technologies, like fMRI (useful magnetic resonance imaging) or puppy (positron emissions tomography) to video show the pastime of the occipital cortex in the concepts, that's the many times happening seen section. In people who can see, throughout REM sleep random yet stable neural impulses hearth away, stimulating encoded seen memories at random. Our desires are continuously very random, and many in the psychology/neuroscience community have confidence that we weave the tale at the same time in our minds as quickly as we awaken, and that certainly during the dream the guy isn't certainly experiencing a 'tale', yet random seen pictures and their emotional significances. Assuming an empirical point of view, somebody blind from beginning probably would not see something throughout desires, using fact they have in no way had any stimulation coming in during the eyes (a minimum of none that has reached the seen cortex) and so have not got any seen memories encoded. yet thats purely hypothesis. Its an enticing question, yet one that demands some technology to choose, and not purely philosophical hypothesis.
2016-11-24 22:23:27
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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There was a blind person on my psychology course when I was at uni and the question of dreams came up in a lecture. The blind person said they dreamt in images and pictures but didn't go into detail.
2007-03-17 04:30:26
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answer #7
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answered by Snake eyes 3
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I assume you mean the dreams we have in sleepy-bye-land, not dreams as in "hopes and dreams" (these are as varied as everyone else's).
When you think about your dreams, you will realize that they aren't only sights, but sounds, thoughts, and feelings -- lots of things.
I would imagine, that, if blind from birth, they wouldn't dream in visual images, but their dreams would have all the other stuff ours do.
2007-03-12 13:27:13
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answer #8
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answered by tehabwa 7
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I don't know, I can only guess, that they would give everything to see their mama... To see how happiness looks on the faces of those whom they love. To see a tear, the sun, the colors. Just to see...the life. And they also have the dreams other people who can see have. They dream more. Or maybe they have to dream more. How else to imagine how the sun shines...
2007-03-12 04:50:37
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answer #9
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answered by sslloonniikk 1
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A close friend is blind from birth and she has the same dreams everyone else has...
2007-03-12 04:29:34
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answer #10
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answered by Sinclair 6
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