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#1 |
So we are clear
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Let me explain an abstract thought I was having. I used to wonder does everyone see the same color. Does "green" look the same to me as it does to other people. Then I wanted to expand on this, does color exist at all? Is colored light bouncing off everything within space or is color just how our brains process wavelengths of light as they enter our retina. Wavelengths within our range of sight is called visible light but is that just human bias?
Is visible light "visible" or is it just as present as all other forms of electro-magnetic radiation and our brains just comprehend it as color?
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"don't hate me for being a heterosexual white guy disparaging slacktivism, hate me for all those murders I've done." |
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#2 |
Burn.
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I introduce you to Colorimetry, AKA the science of color.
So the simple fact that we can study it, and perform experiments with it, means it exists. Anyway, from that site, an average human can identify over 16 million different colors, so I imagine most of the population can see something, say a banana, and can say "It's yellow.", and a good number of folks can say it's the same shade of yellow, given even and steady lighting. Granted, you have colorblind people, but that's more the result of genetics getting involved, and I imagine that's a whole other kettle of fish.
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"Only the fool wishes to go into battle to beat someone for the satisfaction of beating someone." -A Thousand Sons Rules. Read them, know them, love them. Last edited by Flarecobra; 04-21-2014 at 04:18 PM. |
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#3 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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If people are going to insist time exists, we might as well consider our own perception of light bouncing off stuff as a thing that exists. It's measurable and all that.
Now, you need eyes to see it. Well, I need special equipment to see UV light. Does it exist? Yes. I need special equipment like an electron microscope to see a virus. Does it exist? Yes. So even assuming there were no animals in the entire universe with eyes to see it, one could presume that color exists. |
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#4 | |||
Just sleeping
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I mean, maybe we spend more time thinking about electromagnetic waves with frequencies between 400nm and 700nm, but that would be (imho) because we have specialized sensors for them, whereas other wavelengths are only perceived as heat or pain along with so many other stimuli (or not sensed at all). That doesn't make them any more real or less real than other frequencies. I'm not going to get into how "It's just in your head" doesn't make something unreal, just difficult to measure.
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Be T-Rexcellent to each other, tako.
Last edited by phil_; 04-21-2014 at 04:31 PM. |
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#6 | |
So we are clear
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Let me use a very specific comparison to explain. A hot pepper is not in fact hot, it merely triggers the sensation of heat on the tongue. Likewise having your hands so cold they begin to burn. The sensation of "hot" is artificial, a perception of a physical property Its more akin to the question, if a tree falls in the forest with no one around it does it make a sound? Obviously it creates vibrations in the air, but is that sound or is sound the interpretation of these vibrations.
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"don't hate me for being a heterosexual white guy disparaging slacktivism, hate me for all those murders I've done." |
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#7 |
OMG! WHAT SHOULD I DO NOW?
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 3,802
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There is something that does boggle my mind at times...
Premise 1: A sun's ray contains pretty much a full spectrum of colors (even if we humans can't detect them all naturally). So it pretty much has a rainbow of colors. Premise 2: Humans (and certain animals presumably) cannot see color of objects unless light reflects onto the object and onto our retina. Premise 3: In regards to most objects, the color white is the reflection of all the colors, and black is the absorption of all the colors with the other colors falling within the two extremes. Mindscrew Conclusion 1: Doesn't that technically mean that regarding the actual physical properties of any object, that they are simultaneously multiple hues of colors and that the "color" we refer to is actually the make-up of all the colors that got reflected to us. So hypothetically, an apple which we think is red is actually NOT actually red in its physical layout, but just what we call it because the reflected combination of hues that is rejected/reflected by the object comes to our eyes and we call it the color Red because that is what we perceive (and because it is easier than saying "This object possesses X degree of red, Y degree of blue and Z degree of green")? (The above Red/Blue/Green assumes the general computer pixel-color logic of mixing hues) Separate Question: So if a black object absorbs all colors, why can I distinctively see a black object? Is it just that I can see its absence in contrast to all the other non-black objects? Is the shade of black we see in most objects an imperfect representation of the color black that does not in fact absorb all colors? I know my thoughts probably sound retarded, but it has been nagging me in my head sometimes and while I assume I know the basics of what is taught to me in school, I don't claim to be an expert on the subject past the very preliminary facts... Last edited by Menarker; 04-21-2014 at 05:07 PM. |
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#8 |
Professional Threadkiller
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No black is actually completely black unless you're like, looking at dark matter or some bizarre magical nano material that literally doesn't let photons escape.
No, I'm going to make the dumbest question: Our eyes detect light in a certain range and our ears detect noise in a certain range. Of course, they're orders of magnitude apart, but would it be somehow possible to HEAR light and SEE sound? |
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#9 |
Burn.
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Nope, because of photons, which is what makes up light.
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"Only the fool wishes to go into battle to beat someone for the satisfaction of beating someone." -A Thousand Sons Rules. Read them, know them, love them. |
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#10 | ||
So we are clear
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[edit] something else. Probably the main reason we see visual light is because physical objects reflect it but air and water merely diffuse it. So swimming or walking we can filter out objects easily.
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"don't hate me for being a heterosexual white guy disparaging slacktivism, hate me for all those murders I've done." Last edited by Aerozord; 04-21-2014 at 08:05 PM. |
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