• riquisimo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      57 minutes ago

      Don’t let them pee on your Cheerios. Purple is a color, just like magenta, pink, cyan, brown, and all the other “not in the rainbow/ROYGBIV” colors.

      Gatekeeping colors, I tell ya. Don’t let 'em get you burnt sienna with rage.

    • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Purple, the color directly between red and blue, is a creation of your mind interpreting a band of light that triggers your red and blue sensing nerves, but no green is sensed. The actual band of light we can see goes from red to green to blue. Purple doesn’t fall between those colors, meaning it wouldn’t be included in a rainbow, and isn’t any “pure” light you could see, since it doesn’t fall on the spectrum.

      Essentially, any time you see purple, you’re seeing two different frequencies of light that your mind interprets as a single frequency.

      • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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        56 minutes ago

        Mould this not disqualify any mixed color? We only have receptors for three colors, and if we’re arguing that. If purple isn’t a color because it’s actually two mixed together, that should also mean colors like orange, yellow, cyan, magenta, atc are also not be colors by that definition right?

      • shneancy@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        ah a similar explanation to why yellow is not an actual colour either

        the silly explanation that has no effect on how we perceive, use, or think about colour. sigh why are the people responsible for those studies calling those colours not real? Why not just colours resulting from mixing other colours like the artists have done since the invention of paint?

      • exasperation@lemm.ee
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        14 hours ago

        What is violet at the end of the visible spectrum, then? We call the higher wavelength stuff ultraviolet, and violet looks purple to me, so I’m having trouble reconciling this stuff with what you’re saying.

      • essteeyou@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        Your definition of color is based only on human perception? Is purple a color for a mantis shrimp?

        Edit: I guess not in a pure sense because it’s still two wavelengths of light. Perhaps a mantis shrimp can detect a totally different wavelength and sees it as “purple” or something.

        Now I’m thinking about how we don’t know how other humans interpret colors. Like what I see as red, you may see as blue. Ugh.

        • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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          10 hours ago

          Definition I’m using is any color that can be expressed as a single wavelength of light. Purple cannot be, since it’s actually two wavelengths simultaneously.

          • essteeyou@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            Perceiving it as a color seems more practical though. It’s not like we look at “red” and think “ah yes, a single wavelength of light”