The seen know what colors are and how they look, but how can you describe the color of a blind person? Considering the fact that sighters see colors in different ways, you may see the task as difficult, but many colors can be associated with certain aromas, flavors, sounds or feelings. Read on to learn some tips to describe the color of a blind person.
The blind from birth (understanding that the question refers to them) can not fully understand the allusions to light or colors, and probably associate them with bodily sensations, mainly related to temperature. With the forms or the volume, however, it is another story, because the blind do have the ability to have an idea of volume generated from their experience touching and feeling the world.
A visually impaired person may have the ability, even if simple, to see: We must distinguish between visual impairment and total loss. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), about 16% of those categorized as visually impaired face total loss of sight, while the rest, about 84%, can see, even in a way that can be described as very poor, but they can distinguish motion or light And colors
Bahman Khoshru Yes, I agree with you that the blind do not have a direct visual experience. But they can represent this experience, through the remaining four senses. And by listening to the visual experiences of others.
M. Nabil Salimi Yes this is true Dr. Nabil, but I disagree with you in the matter of imagination. There is nothing hard to imagine. Even the image of God and the angels, imagination is the attribute of absolute free thought