because the way you talk is as if the brain processes and adjusts, and then there is seeing of the result, as if there is a homunculus in there somewhere watching a screen. — unenlightened
I'm just reporting on what the neuroscientist said about it. He's the expert. — Michael
And it's not as simple as two colours "sitting next to each other" appearing as a different colour. Remember the dress? People saw different colours - some white and gold, others blue and black - even though the stimulus was the same. And that's because the stimulus isn't the only thing that's responsible for the perception of colour. Our bodies play an essential role in that dress being either white and gold or blue and black. — Michael
It should be noted that seeing strawberries and seeing a picture of strawberries, is not the same thing. I'm near sighted, and wear glasses to see things far away. But when I'm shown a picture of things far away, I have to take off my glasses to see well, those objects in the picture. So clearly it is a distinct process by which you see a picture of an object from actually seeing that object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Couldn't the dress be both? It would just depend on how you look at it, no? — Moliere
What's the difference between red-tinted sunglasses and eyes? They both have a role in influencing what colour we see things to be. Just look at those with tetrachromacy. Do they see the "real" colours, or is the extra type of cone cell performing a "tinting" effect? — Michael
But seeing pixels is seeing nothing. — unenlightened
Or you haven't, and the naive understanding of colour is wrong. — Michael
Interesting that you've targeted what you call the "naïve understanding" of colour, rather than the ordinary way of speaking. What if my understanding of colour was just as sophisticated as yours, if not more so, but I objected to the wording of conclusions like Hanover's? — Sapientia
Hmph. If I want to know the peak wavelength range of a particular colour, I'll ask the scientist not wearing the rose-tinted glasses. — Baden
I just see words. — Baden
Anyway, what's a pixel if it's not part of a word, shape or colour? — Baden
I'm not saying you can't speak of the situation coherently as you do. It's just not the only way of speaking about it. There's nothing odd in what un said. — Baden
Sure. Colour is an appearance, not a trans-appearance property of external stimuli. — Michael
Colour is not just appearance, if it is appearance at all. Otherwise I couldn't appear red without being red, but I'm not red, and your red tinted glasses don't change that, they just change how I appear to you. — Sapientia
How can you see the words if you can't see the pixels? You cannot. The words would not appear to you if not for the many tiny black pixels which form the shapes which we recognise as words. What you're saying is absurd. It's not analogous to to, say, a cup and the atoms which compose the cup. I can actually see the pixels, and so can you. — Sapientia
And if colour is just an appearance, you can't claim that anything is red and really mean that, because "appears" and "is" don't mean the same thing. — Sapientia
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