The author characterizes himself as a "poor visualizer;" he declares that music arouses in him only very rarely visual representations; "even then they are fragmentary, consisting of simple forms without bond between them, appearing on a dark background, remaining visible for a moment or two, and soon disappearing."
"Essay on the Creative Imagination"
Th. Ribot
Any collector-at least, any collector who was a serious arms-student-could do that, particularly if he were a good visualizer and kept his stuff in some systematic order.
"Murder in the Gunroom"
Henry Beam Piper
For the people who have intuition, which is probably another name for musical or muscular perception, often appreciate the quality of an event and the inwardness of an act far better than the visualizer.
"Public Opinion"
Walter Lippmann