Zelebg         
         
bongo fury         
         in what case you would say colors do exist, — Zelebg
and what are the possible cases where you would say colors don't really exist? — Zelebg
Zelebg         
         
bongo fury         
         Colors do not really exist in the brain — Zelebg
where light waves are encoded from sensory input to form a signal or whatever electrochemical kind of abstract information. — Zelebg
an agent or “self” [...] to decode, understand or perceive those signals as colors — Zelebg
If you say colors do actually exist, then I think you in fact must be proposing a separate realm of existence for their being, some kind of parallel dimension — Zelebg
Zelebg         
         A pre neural-network (pre 80's) computational picture of the brain?
christian2017         
         
RegularGuy         
         That is how I understand the question, and my answer is no. Colors do not really exist in the brain where light waves are encoded from sensory input into a signal or whatever electrochemical type of abstract information. So color signals to become real or to exist per se as colors, an agent or “self” is necessary to decode, understand or perceive those signals as colors, while in reality colors might as well look like a monochrome waterfall of Matrix symbols. — Zelebg
Zelebg         
         This is physicalist nonsense.
RegularGuy         
         
TheWillowOfDarkness         
         
RegularGuy         
         Everything we experience is equally a self-generation. Our body doesn't produce just the appearance of colours, but anything we encounter with our senses, including the shape, mass, etc. of.objects . If this self generation was a problem for the reality of colours, it is equally a problem for the reality of anything we experience. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Zelebg         
         
Zelebg         
         Colors exist as objects of cognition.
Zelebg         
         Everything we experience is equally a self-generation. Our body doesn't produce just the appearance of colours, but anything we encounter with our senses, including the shape, mass, etc. of.objects . If this self generation was a problem for the reality of colours, it is equally a problem for anything we experience.
Zelebg         
         And as I was getting at, it’s a dumb question.
RegularGuy         
         Dumb is wasting everyones time to share your purposeles opinion. Go away, shooo! — Zelebg
christian2017         
         
bongo fury         
         A pre neural-network (pre 80's) computational picture of the brain?
- bongo fury
Is there any other picture of the brain where sensory visual input is not first encoded into serial electric signal in the eye before it even reaches the brain? — Zelebg
Sir Philo Sophia         
         a. we actually see colors (colors exist)
b. we only think we see colors (colors do not exist) — Zelebg
Brett         
         Zelebg is right, colour does not exist, only light. — Brett
3017amen         
         
Daniel         
         
Sir Philo Sophia         
         Likewise you can see a color to experience it. And in describing both experiences, how do we prove its experience? — 3017amen
3017amen         
         
Sir Philo Sophia         
         I'm starting to build a coherent hypothesis that qualia and emotive phenomenon are logically needed to optimally create and convey wisdom, but not at all needed to create data, info, or knowledge.The emotive phenomenon of color choice, may or may not be logically necessary. — 3017amen
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