[MD] From each... to each
David M
davidint at blueyonder.co.uk
Sun May 14 13:26:29 PDT 2006
Craig
I understand that experiments like this have been done
and the people without the words can't make any distinction.
In fact the way the brain differentiates colours may be learnt
and the neural pathways for colour recognition laid down whilst learning the
language,
the experimenters are still working on cracking this one. So your reality is
perhaps
more to do with philosophical assumptions than you realised.
DM
----- Original Message -----
From: <craigerb at comcast.net>
To: <moq_discuss at moqtalk.org>
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2006 7:17 AM
Subject: Re: [MD] From each... to each
> [Arlo]
>> Pirsig had also written, "Similarly, Choctaw, Tunica, the Keresian Pueblo
>> Indians and many other people make no terminological distinction between
>> blue > and green." Was this because no one, biologically, among these
>> tribes had the
>> necessary receptors in their eyes to make this distinction? According to
>> Pirsig, it is because their culture did not value such a distinction, and
>> so
>> the language did not reflect it, and so those assimiliating the culture
>> do not
>> value it.
>
> This is a great counter-example to Arlo's theory. Show a blue card & a
> green card to a member of one of the afore-mentioned tribes. Then give
> them a deck of such cards & tell them to separate the cards that look most
> like the first from those that look most like the second. He or she will
> be able to do so DESPITE NOT HAVING A DIFFERENT WORD FOR THE TWO COLORS
> NOR THE CULTURE'S VALUING THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN THEM. Why? Because he
> or she experiences the difference in color.
> Craig
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