Redness in a sentence as a noun

From the Bible itself, it's a complete mystery where the redness, horns, tail and pitchfork come from.

Sure it gets heavy and your shoulder will show some redness but that thing could carry incredible loads.

The canonical example is the "redness of red".

Your idea of a lightbulb doesn't exist outside your brain any more than your idea of redness or free will does.

There's no individual 'redness of red', there's the red you saw for the first second, the red you saw for the second second, and so on.

The redness of men in Egyptian art is based on the fact that men's skin is redder, due to more hemoglobin closer to the surface.

So, if you have the philosophical Q's figured out, could you send me the lisp code for the 'redness of red', I need my latest program to have phenomenal feeling.

First off, 25% of the children who receive the DTaP vaccine get a fever, 25% get redness or swelling where the shot was given, and 25% get soreness or tenderness where the shot was given.

But a that point your not talking about 'redness of red' in the abstract but getting into mimicking your personal emotional responses.

But that's nothing like how we experience redness, and it's extraordinarily hard to express what we experience in that vocabulary.

You might come up with [redness of sky, yellowness of sun, roundness of sun] The question is, can you get to a point where you can't subdivide anymore, are there absolute elements of experience?

I would suggest it's not the fact that the code does not produce emotion that's the problem it's your assumption that anything that understands redness must include an emotional context.

> The elusive subjective conscious experience the redness of red, the painfulness of pain that philosophers call qualia?

If you look at the way neurons work there is some computation involved and comparison between individual sensor neurons but at some point that neuron fires and guess what that's what redness means.

Here are some of them:- How can that sensation of redness that you experience when you look at a ripe tomato arise from or be explained by scientific law, which seems to only answer questions that are very qualitatively different from this question?

Most Qualia are rather well understood an example taken from wikipedia "the perceived redness of an evening sky".You can talk about why they sky has 'redness' but subjectively what's important is the sensors in your eye, and how what happens to the signal.

Successor functions in mathematics might be an indicator of the presence of the recursive thinking necessary to conceptualise constructions such as "the redness of red" or "thinking about thinking", and these are necessary to understand the infinity of the natural number line.

Some of the more hazardous side effects of adderall: Dangerous increase in blood pressure Tachycardia or a high pulse rate Irregular heart rate Difficulty breathing Chest pain Allergic reaction that includes swelling and redness in the eyes or throat Migraine headaches Syncope or losing consciousness Blurry or double vision Seizure activity and excessive and uncontrollable shaking Extreme nervousness and paranoid delusions Mood swings that include hostility and severe aggression Depression

Redness definitions

noun

a response of body tissues to injury or irritation; characterized by pain and swelling and redness and heat

See also: inflammation rubor

noun

red color or pigment; the chromatic color resembling the hue of blood