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This person is born blinded. Please don't use such complicated terms

2007-05-19 10:01:02 · 5 answers · asked by PurpleAndGold10 3 in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

5 answers

You can't describe color to someone born blind, any more than you can explain sound to the deaf. You can make analogies, as someone else pointed out: blue is "cool like water," or red is "hot like fire," but that's not really telling the blind person anything useful.

My best friend was born with some sight, but eventually, she lost all vision due to detached retinas. When we go out shopping, I can describe something as "turquoise" or "emerald" color, and she can remember what that looks like.

Her sister was born completely blind, however, and telling her that something is blue means nothing. She's completely dependent on a sighted person to match colors for her.

2007-05-19 10:10:50 · answer #1 · answered by Wolfeblayde 7 · 0 0

Actually, I'd be more interested in having color explained to me by a blind person. That would be a useful perspective to share, I think.

2007-05-19 10:03:37 · answer #2 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

i'm supplying you with a famous man or woman because of the fact this could properly be a question that merits admire. no longer many human beings could think of of this. Blind human beings experience issues we can't. i could describe pink because of the fact the solar=warm orange=fruit, scent could be stable to them yellow=a lemon. yet another stable scent green=grass, experience and scent of decrease grass blue-the sea, the texture& sound of waves, scent the salt air lavender, pink= i could have them scent the lavender flower I strengthen lavender & it smells remarkable white= sheets desire that facilitates

2017-01-10 09:05:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would probably have him touch something hot (but not TOO hot!) and say, "This is red." Then I would have him touch something cold, and say, "This is blue." The other colors could be something in between.

2007-05-19 10:46:45 · answer #4 · answered by FUNdie 7 · 0 0

by comparing it to experiences they can relate to - like, a "hot" colour like red, you could say it is hot like the sun? you would have to use other senses to explain what colour means to the sighted.

2007-05-19 10:05:27 · answer #5 · answered by Holla H 2 · 1 0

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