The Unity of the Senses: Interrelations Among the ModalitiesAcademic Press, 1978 - 289 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 52 筆
第 8 頁
... sight . Relatively few people are truly synesthetic - rarely do sensory ex- periences of sight , sound , and taste actually arise , secondarily , from inappropriate stimuli ; rarely do secondary images actually blend into primary ...
... sight . Relatively few people are truly synesthetic - rarely do sensory ex- periences of sight , sound , and taste actually arise , secondarily , from inappropriate stimuli ; rarely do secondary images actually blend into primary ...
第 23 頁
... sight could distinguish immediately by vision between a sphere and a cube ( assuming , of course , that the person had previously learned to make the discrimination by touch ) . Locke agreed with Molyneux that such a person could not ...
... sight could distinguish immediately by vision between a sphere and a cube ( assuming , of course , that the person had previously learned to make the discrimination by touch ) . Locke agreed with Molyneux that such a person could not ...
第 222 頁
... sight and sound are consid- ered . For the two modalities connect not directly , but indirectly— through their common actualization of a pleasure that is potential , but not necessary . Swinburne's poetry is replete with synesthetic ...
... sight and sound are consid- ered . For the two modalities connect not directly , but indirectly— through their common actualization of a pleasure that is potential , but not necessary . Swinburne's poetry is replete with synesthetic ...
內容
The Doctrine of Equivalent Information | 11 |
The Doctrine of Analogous Sensory Attributes | 49 |
The Doctrine of Common Psychophysical Properties | 127 |
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常見字詞
activity analogies appear associations attributes auditory bitter brightness called cells cold colors common constant correspondences cross-modal dark described different senses dimensions discrimination doctrine duration effect energy equal equivalence example exist experience expression fact Figure frequency function give given green hand hearing images important increases instance intensity intrinsic language least length light loudness magnitude matching meanings mechanisms metaphor modalities nature neural noted objects odor organ perceived perception perhaps physical pitch play poem poetry possible presented primary principle processes produce properties psychological psychophysical qualities relation relationship relatively reported resemble responses seems sensation senses sensory shape sight similar single smell sound space spatial stimulus subjects suggest sweet symbolism synesthesia synesthetic tactile taste theory tion tone touch transfer unity universal vision visual vowels