What happens with a projector is as follows. Light comes from a lamp and is sent through a condenser lens and then passes through the film. Let's stop here for a moment. What is happening at the film is once again nothing but restriction of the light. The film is basically casting a shadow. The light coming through the slide does not "get colored". The light before the slide is already composed of photons of many different wavelengths — oysteroid
Again, I cannot fault your knowledge of Optics. I think ray tracing, unlike wave theory, is very intuitive, and both do a great job at explaining what we see. It is very difficult to falsify these theories based on immediate perception. We can see light rays being bent by lenses, crossing each other at the focal point and then creating a (real) image on a screen. Thats is certainly the strength of Optics in all its versions, geometric, physical and quantic.
My issue with Optics is that it does not explain vision, and that therefore what we see is more complicated than the optical theories want us to believe. I will not repeat my arguments about
distant objects and their relation to the speed of light but let me mention a very simple argument concerning vision.
We can see illuminated objects even if, at least apparently, no light is reflected into our eyes. We can stand in complete darkness and spy on people.
Huygens' Principle speaks about wavelets that would somehow keep the main wave going. In other words, he was trying to take into account a very fundamental and elementary empirical fact: light beams when they have a certain direction do not disperse sideways indiscriminately. The more they disperse, with distance, the more light looses intensity. Therefore, light does not go on indefinitely but ceases altogether after a while. And we are now expected to believe that light coming from trillions of kilometers away can still somehow reach our eyes? For that we have to accept what every scientist considers as an anathema:
perpetuum mobile. An electric field creates a magnetic field that creates an electric field... ad infinitum.
If light could go on indefinitely why does it stop when going through matter? Friction? Sure, that is as good an explanation as any. But tell me, suppose you shine a powerful light on earth, would it be visible from the moon? Why, after all, it would have stopped after a few kilometers?. Did it somehow regenerate during its travel to the moon?
Back to Huygens. If you suppose that somehow a light beam directed away from us, or an illuminated scene we watch from a dark and hidden corner, reach our eyes anyway, then you must accept the principle that they will remain visible from any distance. Just like the beam is supposed to go on indefinitely.
But then, that would contradict Huygens' Principle in which the wavelets contribute to the sustenance of the main beam. If they have to use energy to propagate in all directions, whatever the direction of the main beam, then how could light go on indefinitely? Where would the energy come from?
These are some of the reasons why I think Optics, and with it the theory of the dual nature of light, are lacking in explanation power.
A last, but certainly not least argument, is the fact that we can cross immense distances without having to move from our place. Telescopes, and microscopes, seem not only to manipulate light, they manipulate space. Maybe all we are seeing is an epiphenomenon, hoe light reacts in a spatial field distorted by lenses.
I will be first to admit that this a very far-fetched solution and I do not know how seriously we should take it. Still, that is certainly something to consider if we accept the fact that telescopes show us objects where they are, at the moment they are there.