pyraxis wrote:
I've often wondered if another thing that distinguishes synesthesia from normal metaphorical associations is arbitrariness. Most people associate mint with cold colors, and heat with red/orange, due to cultural conditioning and the like. Most synesthesia perceptions seem to make no sense at all (Middle C has nothing to do with red...)
Of course, it could be that the associations were made so long ago that the synesthete has no memory of the source (what colors were the letters in your first alphabet book printed in?)
I find the whole thing fascinating because there is so little formal research as of yet. It's still at the stage of people tossing around random theories and personal anecdotes and calling it a science. Which, as a side note, includes everything I've said so far in this thread - I'm no neuroscientist.
When I see colors with music it doesn't seem to be like middle C = red, or something. In a way I associate certain emotions with colors, but again that may be some sort of sensory imprint. I know Jimi Hendrix used to communicate to other musicians and such about music by referencing colors, like "let's make this part sound yellow." I don't see it quite like that, my way is much more visual, like "I'm going to make a small child crying in the corner and then slowly morph him into some sort of mutant that starts kicking people in the teeth." That is the visualization of a certain transition between familiar emotions. But now, once that task has been accomplished, when listening back to it, I will see other visualizations in my mind, like swirling rainbows, or shadows of obscure things against flowing backdrops of color taht relate in no way to the visualization I was trying to impart.
Of course with the few=3 thing I can recall (I remember great details of many things from as far back as 35 years ago - 3 yrs. old) being told that few means three and couple means 2. When someone says "several" I see a 7 in my mind, but that could be because of the "sev" relationship.
I do think that it would be easier to test for it with a subject that is not a visual thinker with a prodigious memory.
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