• Saik0
    link
    fedilink
    English
    10
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Just look at the spectrum chart here. https://www.thoughtco.com/the-visible-light-spectrum-2699036

    Red + green = yellow…

    Green + blue = cyan…

    Red + Yellow = Orange…

    Red + blue(indigo) = a color not on the chart? but in between the two colors is clearly green!

    We perceive purple as an activation of Red and Blue cones in our eyes… The color itself actually doesn’t exist as a discrete wavelength and is a collective hallucination of sorts.

    Edit: Also… Brown isn’t a color. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wh4aWZRtTwU (whoops, wrong link originally, fixed now.)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      146 months ago

      Fine do you want to call it a violet onion then? They are basically the exact same damn thing and violet is a wavelength

      • Saik0
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -16 months ago

        https://jakubmarian.com/difference-between-violet-and-purple/

        Violet and Purple are indeed not the same thing. Purple exists in that we perceive it… that’s not what I’m arguing against. It’s just that it’s not a “real” color. It’s only because of this “mass hallucination” of sorts that we’re okay just accepting that it must be a color when it isn’t representable as a single spectrum color like every other color. It is purple… but purple isn’t a real color, it’s effectively just shorthand for saying that this color is both blue and red. It’s just you being human.

        Brown has the same problem in that it’s just dark orange (from the light spectrum perspective). It turns out that brightness context matters to us, so we choose brown to represent a large swath of that.

        • @brbposting
          link
          06 months ago

          I have a shorthand for “only real in the context that it’s real for humans”… hint, it has four letters and starts with “real”.

          :) interesting info!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      8
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      You’re right about our perception but the color spectrum is based on wavelengths and doesn’t represent color mixing. It only does that when you make a circle out of it and then you see purple between blue and red and that’s your standard RGB color wheel.

      Colored lights do mix. It’s called an additive color since you are adding different lights to create a new color. So red and blue light does Infact create purple light and to get green you have to mix red and yellow light. Mixing RGB or CMY creates white this way.

      The other is subtractive color mixing, like when we paint, to get green we mix blue and yellow instead. Mixing CMY, RYB or RGB would give you black.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      06 months ago

      Just because violet light triggers both red and blue receptors in our eyes, that doesn’t mean there is only discrete red and blue light hitting them. It’s just that light with 380nm to 450nm wavelength triggers both typed of receptors. So there is violet light.

      • Saik0
        link
        fedilink
        English
        16 months ago

        violet IS a discrete wavelength. Purple is not.