Red apples reflect certain light frequencies(interact with light) regardless of whether or not it is under direct observation, and regardless of whether or not the frequencies are perceptible to a creature who may be looking at the apple. — creativesoul
We call those frequencies "red". It's the properties, features, and/or characteristics of red things interacting with light that make them reflect the frequencies we've named "red". Things reflect those frequencies regardless of whether or not those things are under observation. — creativesoul
Is it the frequencies we are calling red, or the objects that reflect those frequencies. — Janus
The point is that it reflects those frequencies only under certain light conditions; so the redness of an apple is not an inherent property... — Janus
You said apples are not red; they only appear red. — Banno
yet you deny that we all have the same experience. — Banno
But when we point out that the experience seems therefore to be irrelevant, you disagree. — Banno
What difference does that make here? In both cases, the apple is red due to how it interacts with light. — creativesoul
I said that when someone says “the apple is red” they really mean “the apple appears red/invokes a certain experience I call ‘red’”. I don’t think that’s even a controversial claim. — khaled
Talking about apples 'seeming to be' and/or 'appearing' red is based upon doubting one's own physiological sensory perception — creativesoul
Doubting one's own physiological sensory perception requires metacognition. Cognition comes first — creativesoul
apples look red because they are red, because the world is at it looks to us, end of story. But it's not. — Marchesk
We call those frequencies "red". It's the properties, features, and/or characteristics of red things interacting with light that make them reflect the frequencies we've named "red". — creativesoul
You see, the funny thing is that you presume we all use the same word, "red", for a certain experience; and yet you deny that we all have the same experience. But when we point out that the experience seems therefore to be irrelevant, you disagree. — Banno
I said that when someone says “the apple is red” they really mean “the apple appears red/invokes a certain experience I call ‘red’”. I don’t think that’s even a controversial claim. Whether or not you assign a property “red” to the apple, my claim remains true. — khaled
Well, I could go back and point out again hat the red of the sportscar and the red of the sunset — Banno
Tell me, have you read Austin's Sense and Sensibilia? — Banno
You too can do better than your silly attempts at undermining perfectly fine concepts. You cannot destroy any concept anyway, least of all the concept of "meaning". Your attempts are futile.You can do better, Oliver. You have some understanding of Wittgenstein. You have a better grasp of the argument than you pretend here. — Banno
A healthy human eye has three types of cone cells, each of which can register about 100 different colour shades, therefore most researchers ballpark the number of colours we can distinguish at around a million. Still, perception of colour is a highly subjective ability that varies from person to person, thus making any hard-and-fast figure difficult to pinpoint.
The average number of colours we can distinguish is around a million
"You'd be hard-pressed to put a number on it," says Kimberly Jameson, an associate project scientist at the University of California, Irvine. "What might be possible with one person is only a fraction of the colours that another person sees.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150727-what-are-the-limits-of-human-vision
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