What is mental imagery like for the congenitally blind? Using a combined storytelling and clay modelling task
and an analysis of the clay models in terms of a physical ontological concept, we observed the visual-like abstraction of
congenitally blind individuals. Next, we observed their distinct mental lexicon construction through an analysis of how
they include attributive adjectives of an animal’s savageness using semantic memory. The results demonstrated that
visual thinking is a conflict between immature visual cognitive resource with critical adult logic induced by the absence
of visual recognition and the proper resources for a mental lexicon. This leads to feelings of estrangement, which allows
this ambiguous concept to occur. To capture visual phenomena, their brain harnesses another particular mode of
thinking, associative and/or bisociative thinking, as a referral in addition to employing self-body referencing as an
archetype. We discuss how these findings can be applied to possible employment opportunities for people with visual
impairments.