No… and maybe! After working as a ‘colorist,’ artist and designer…. I would say not. “We see colors via “rods” and “cones” in our eyes. The rods, color-vision, come in three types receptive to red, green and blue. Every person has RGB cones that are triggered by boundaries of slightly different wavelengths, so […]
Written on Saturday, July 5th, 2008 by sanfordmarks :: 0 comments to this post
No… and maybe! After working as a ‘colorist,’ artist and designer…. I would say not. “We see colors via “rods” and “cones” in our eyes. The rods, color-vision, come in three types receptive to red, green and blue. Every person has RGB cones that are triggered by boundaries of slightly different wavelengths, so that everyone perceives the precise colors slightly differently, giving each one a slightly different band width, and intensity. An extreme and solid example is colour blindness: this informs us clearly that some people can have radically different perception of colors, except that in most cases the differences are much smaller. Our life experiences and upbringing affects the clarity with which we see colours. As no two people have the same experiences, all people do view colours slightly differently for both genetic and historical reasons.” I know this is true as my son calls his green shirt his gray shirt… and he is not color-blin
Read>>>>>>:
http://www.humantruth.info/subjectivism.html
http://www.visualexpert.com/FAQ/Part3/cfaqPart3.html#p3.11
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