Yup. I had the same revelation when I learned that many of the colors we perceive don't really "exist". The closest thing to hue in nature is wavelength, but there is no wavelength for purple, for example. The color purple is our visual system's interpretation of data (ratio of trichromatic cone cell activation). It doesn't exist by itself.It's the same reason that allows RGB screens to work. No screen has ever produced "real" yellow (for which there is a wavelength), but they still stimulate our trichromatic vision very similar to how actual yellow light would.
NetMageSCW|2 months ago
Waterluvian|2 months ago
We can objectively measure the properties of the radiation reaching eyeballs and we can detect sensor differences in some eyeballs in various ways. But we can’t ever know that “red” is the same sensation for both of us.
The concept of “red” is real, made concrete by there being a word for it.
But most colours can be associated with a primary wavelength… except purple. So by that definition, they don’t really exist.
danhau|2 months ago