ChatterBank3 mins ago
How do we know that we all see the same colours?
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If person sees colour "A" as colour "B", but calls it colour "A" because that is what everyone else calls it, How would they know that they are seeing the wrong colour? Could we all be seeing colours slightly or significantly different to others? Does it matter since the person calls colour "A", colour "A", even though they see colour "B"?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.They do those colour blindness tests with the dots. My ex was colour blind and had real problems with some of the tests. I also remember hearing that men have less cones on their retinas than women and can't distinguish as many shades - which is why when your mrs shows you 3 different colours of cream paint and they all look the same to you, they are - but not to her.
But colour blindness isn't exactly the thing that's being asked about (I don't think) colour blindness is where you can't distinguish between, for example red and green whereas what the OP is asking is if we see colours all the same. For example, I know the sky is blue and the grass is green because those are the names of the colours I've always been told those things are, but what if someone sees blue the way I see green but because they've always been told the sky is blue that's the colour they call it. Or maybe the sky to me is a differnt shade of blue as to another person?
I think we dont know. We dont know if we see the same colours. We dont know if we taste the same tastes etc. However as most of the genes we have are shared with the rest of the population the likelihood is that we are all experiencing fairly similar things. Do you ever wonder if you are the only person alive and that everyone else is a figment of your imagination.
I don't think you would know if what you see is the same as other people, and if you "see" green and I "see" blue, but we have both always been taught that the colour of the object we both see is called "red", what would it matter?
I do remember my brother as a toddler on a bus, on seeing his first West Indian, stared at him for a long time before announcing very loudly "Mum, look at that blue man!"
I do remember my brother as a toddler on a bus, on seeing his first West Indian, stared at him for a long time before announcing very loudly "Mum, look at that blue man!"
Interesting point. Since colour equates to wavelength I guess you can not help but see the right colour (eye deficits aside). The problem is whether the brain interprets it the same to give you the same conscious sensation as someone else.
Until the brain function is known in detail that might be hard to determine, but as some here suggest, it could account for some folk's taste in colour combination.
Until the brain function is known in detail that might be hard to determine, but as some here suggest, it could account for some folk's taste in colour combination.