What makes RG light and Y light the same color is how your human eyes react to these two spectra. RG light and Y light are metamers for the color we call "yellow". — InPitzotl
We're "color blind" to spectra; we can't even tell RG light from Y light. — InPitzotl
Yes. Switching form, I'll quote you with quotation marks."Spectra"(capitalized for grammatical reasons only) IS a name. — creativesoul
"You have. The earlier bits about seeing the crayons with the name on them and all that..."Seeing red is the exact same thing as seeing the spectra we've named "red".
Again, what's confusing you? Humans created English. "Red" is a human word. So, human word? Check. Humans have human eyes; human color vision. Human color vision has particular properties. We made that word to talk about some equivalence class humans can see.Surely you are not asserting this. What are you doing with the word "so" here? So because "red" is a human word, it refers to a human group?
Huh? Which is it? Is it normal parlance or all things we've given the namesake to?Using the term "red" in normal parlance is to pick out all things we've given the namesake to...
Ah, you're choking on human grouping. Well, yes, humans invent language; and they make up stuff. That's not a bad thing; it's part of the human project. But, humans not only invent language and make up stuff; they are also animals of a particular type. We're primates, and we're mammals. We also have human eyes; human eyes tend to be equipped with trichromatic vision of a particular type. The particular kind of trichromatic vision humans have begins with the three cone types humans as a species have; the human species' L, M, and S cones. Those cones respond to spectra in particular ways; they are incapable of measuring spectra per se... rather, they measure equivalence classes of spectra. So there are equivalence classes of spectra that humans can see based on human physical properties. The equivalence classes are groupings. The properties are human. Therefore, these are human groupings, which means that, no, "human groupings" are not necessarily existentially dependent on human language use. This human grouping is "existentially" dependent on human cone sensitivities.Spectra are not a human grouping. Color vision capability is not a human group. "Spectra" is a human word. "Color" is a human word. "Mt. Everest" is a human word. None of the referents of those words - which act as names - are human groupings. Human groupings are existentially dependent upon human language use. Spectra, colors, and Mt. Everest are most certainly... not.
"Even" is an equivalence class of integers. "Odd" is an equivalence class of integers. But "odd" is not an integer.You said spectra are not colors, and also that green is a color... — creativesoul
Are you saying that no other animal perceives any of the sets of spectra that we call "red"?
No. I'm saying that no other animal perceives the set spectra that we call "red" as the same color. — InPitzotl
Thought you weren't interested?This is still the problem. — creativesoul
Sounds good to me; yes, this is still the problem. If you don't get it now, I can do a "mathemagic" analog if you like next using numbers and equivalence classes as metaphors. But I can only explain this in so many ways; either you'll get it or you won't.This is still the problem. — creativesoul
This is still the problem.
— creativesoul
Thought you weren't interested? — InPitzotl
Are you saying that no other animal perceives any of the sets of spectra that we call "red"?
No. I'm saying that no other animal perceives the set spectra that we call "red" as the same color.
— InPitzotl
This is still the problem. — creativesoul
Let's go back to this box of crayons. There are 96 crayons here; each is a distinct spectral distribution, and we see them as different colors. But that's kind of cheating, because these crayons were made for humans. — InPitzotl
Imagine our mantis shrimp has a box of crayons. There's 960 crayons in his box. When we open it up, we see one row in one compartment has crayons that all look like the same color yellow to us. — InPitzotl
Suppose one of these reflects only 700nm and 545nm light; call that crayon A; another reflects 570nm light only; call that crayon B. On the next row, however, we see orange crayons. Call one of these C.
So here's the key. Since each crayon reflects a single spectral distribution, then the two terms are pretty much analogous. So crayon=spectral distribution; crayons=spectra. — InPitzotl
no other animal perceives the crayons that we call 'yellow' as the same color. Again, we call crayons A and B yellow; and we call crayon C orange. Both the mantis shrimp and Spot see crayons A, B, and C (they see all of these spectra). But the mantis shrimp sees A and B as different colors. Spot sees A, B, and C as the same color. — InPitzotl
That makes as much sense as saying that California doesn't exist for anyone who's never been there and is never going to go.How do colours exist to the blind? No. — Leviosa
've can't keep track of what the disagreement here is precisely anymore. Why don't we table the discussion on whether there are colors for a moment and address an easier question: Are there chairs? — Douglas Alan
You're still confused over the same point. There are three completely distinct things here: (1) frequency, (2) spectral distribution, (3) color.So, it seems that we're not so much in disagreement aside from the claim you made that no other animal sees the frequencies that we call "red" as red. — creativesoul
Chairs are not the same scenario though. Not at all. We - and only we - determine what counts as a chair. The same is not true with colors. — creativesoul
I should point out for clarity that Douglas's description of color here is different than the one I've been presenting to you. They are, however, both correct... they're just focused on different things. The color concept that I'm describing could be called "colorimetric color"; that is indeed only in the eyes. Colorimetric color is about what we can possibly discern; it's the principle subject of colorimetry. What Douglas is describing we could call "perceptual color", which we can say is in the brain (though really that starts in the eyes). Since I'm just trying to explain the fundamentals to you, I'm focusing entirely on colorimetric color. I defer to Douglas for the rest, since that's what he volunteered.I would argue that it is the same with colors. ... Color vision is far from only in the eyes. — Douglas Alan
You're still confused over the same point. There are three completely distinct things here: (1) frequency, (2) spectral distribution, (3) color.
Photons hit spots on our retina; but they aren't confined to having single frequencies (1's); they have distinct frequencies. But there's some distribution of them depending on what you're looking at... more at some frequencies than others. Because each photoreceptor is sensitive to a range of frequencies, then it's the entire distribution (2) that matters, not individual frequencies. But a given photoreceptor is simply more sensitive to some frequencies than others... at the photopsin level, it either folds or doesn't, but just has a probability of folding per photon based on the photon's frequency. That means you can make it fold with a given probability in multiple ways; you can fire less photons at the more sensitive frequencies, or more at the less sensitive ones. — InPitzotl
Since what matters for detection is simply the raw number of photopsin events, and there's multiple ways of reaching that number, then we're not detecting (2)'s; we're detecting "numbers of events". — InPitzotl
I would argue that it is the same with colors. Color vision is far from only in the eyes. There is a lot of cognitive processing that is unique to humans that goes into our color vision. And even if it were the case that all of human color vision were determined only by our human eyes, the eyes of all animals and potential aliens are going to work differently and classify crayons differently. — Douglas Alan
Sort of (changed from yes); I'm referring to the number of photopsin molecules (available for detection). (2) has a particular effect on our eyes. A different (2) could also have the same effect on our eyes. So call the former (2a), and the latter (2b). The effect is (3x); (2a) would have effect (3x), and (2b) would also have effect (3x). Since we can't distinguish (2a) from (2b), it doesn't make sense to say that we detect (2a). What we detect instead is (3x). 3x is "an equivalence class of spectra". 2a is just a member of that equivalence class. 2b is another member.This bit leaves me a bit confused though. When you say that "we're not detecting (2)'s; we're detecting numbers of events" are you referring to us or the photoreceptors under consideration? — creativesoul
Colors and color vision are not equivalent. I said that what chairs are is not the same as what colors are. The former is existentially dependent upon us, the latter is not. — creativesoul
I don't consider chairs to be existentially dependent on us. Chairs would exist even if we didn't. — Douglas Alan
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