yy2bggggs
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 2,435
How about using the established term? Just call them optical illusions. Why would you want to call them brain failures if you know they are not a failure of the brain in any meaningful sense?So I know what you're saying that it's not really brain failing because the brain's doing everything correctly enough but then what do you want to call it, brain deception?
So let's go to color grapheme synesthesia then. Do we or do we not see graphemes? If we do, then if a person perceives color associated with a particular grapheme, then in what sense is her brain "failing"? Please note:Hang on a sec I need to get something cleared up because I think I'm saying what you're saying (not about the Graphemes though). Photoreceptors send stilumi to the brain, they get summated, and you "see" color. I think we agree on that simplified version.
- The color percept is triggered by a grapheme
- A particular grapheme always correlates with a particular color
- The grapheme is really there
When I say it's naive, I'm not slinging insults at you. I'm referring to naive realismWP--the notion that we perceive things "directly", "as they really are". You are assuming a view of naive realism in your discussion--this grapheme is somehow "supposed to be green", and if we "see it correctly", we'll "see it to be green".I call them brain failures, you say that's naive, but I mean, nuts to you y2.
I don't think this analysis is useful. Light is light, and light is simply photons at various wavelengths. Colors are colors, and they are perceptual qualities. The one has nothing to do with the other, except insofar as spectra in particular environmental situations using "ordinary" scenery convey information about something immutable, and therefore useful, about an object. Given a reference brain and sensory apparatus, we can conventionally talk about the meaning of colors, but only because that gives us a context. A brain or sensory apparatus that works differently can only be faulted as working differently. Or not efficiently. Or could be lauded because it's more efficient at certain useful tasks.
You have to have some actual criteria, you see, other than the naive notion that green is "how an apple really is" and the "proper way to see it" would be to see it as green.
If you prefer spectroscopy, then fine. However ...And yes I do think color exists independent of the brain only because it is reduced to spectroscopy, but maybe that is my naivete showing; I give more credit to the understanding of electromagnetic color before what our brains see.
...why insist on using terms such as "blue"? What are you going to call 461nm if 460nm is blue? How are you going to define brown? What is white? You're much better off dropping all color terms and sticking to charts if you want to do spectroscopy. You're welcome to call what you're doing color analysis, but don't confuse what you're doing with what we're doing when we call something yellow.So I don't really consider the subjectivity of color because it's useless when you have a really really really good definition for color (460nm = blue).
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