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View Full Version : essentially polluted minds!!


RuroumiKenshin
Apr7-03, 12:54 AM
Did it ever occur to anyone that everything we see isn't the same as everyone elses? For example, you have a red apple. Someone, say Mike, and I are viewing this apple. He has defined the color he sees as red and I have defined the color as red as well. But, if I saw what he was looking at through his eyes, then I would see a different color than the one I have defined as red. Could this be feasible/possible? I don't think so...but its an interresting idea. And this could applie to everything. What do you think?

kyleb
Apr7-03, 01:00 AM
ya, it happens all the time; colorblindness and the like.

N_Quire
Apr7-03, 01:01 AM
Who's Mike?

wuliheron
Apr7-03, 01:21 AM
Who's Mike?

Hey, I know Mike, he's cool, and he ain't color blind either. :0)

heusdens
Apr7-03, 05:05 PM
Originally posted by MajinVegeta
Did it ever occur to anyone that everything we see isn't the same as everyone elses? For example, you have a red apple. Someone, say Mike, and I are viewing this apple. He has defined the color he sees as red and I have defined the color as red as well. But, if I saw what he was looking at through his eyes, then I would see a different color than the one I have defined as red. Could this be feasible/possible? I don't think so...but its an interresting idea. And this could applie to everything. What do you think?

Leaving out the deficits in our hardware, we have to acknowledge the fact that our hardware is similar, and acts in a similar way, producing similar results. There might be slights differences in how different people experience a same stimuli (under laboratory conditions) which are caused by small changes in our hardware.

I think that is what we should conclude, based on reason.

kyleb
Apr7-03, 05:55 PM
ah but all of our "hardware" have their own little "deficits", or differences anyway; some more than others but it is still like fingerprints and snowflakes, you just don't get two of the same.