stevevw
inquisitive
But because there are physical reasons for the way light waves work, pigmentation, and eye cone function the interpretation is restricted to a certain range. Its not as if one person can see blue and the other red under normal circumstances without some problem in the eye cones or other mechanisms.You seem to be missing my point. When we take into account that perception of colour depends not just on the physical structures of the eye, but also they way that information is interpreted by the brain, it's entirely plausible that the colour perception of Person A is different to that of Person B.
Color Is Subjective - ExtremeTech
The spectrum range for blue is completely different to red. You can't imagine or interpret red out of blue. There may some variance in the same colour between people because they will end up interpreting blue with a slightly different shade within the blue range. But that's still the same colour and usually has a logical reason such as differences in illumination due to time of day or the position someone is viewing things from.
Last edited:
Upvote
0