my reasoning: the actual colors we can see -> the wavelengths that we can extrapolate to -> basically extrapolated wavelengths plus an ‘unpure-ness’ factor -> not even real wavelengths (ok well king blue and maybe lavender if I’m being generous could be)

  • @AdrianTheFrogOP
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    617 hours ago

    well these ones specifically are displayed on your monitor (which can only display red, green, and blue) so they actually aren’t real

    your eyes are being tricked into thinking there’s yellow for example, when there’s really only red and green, this is because we can’t really see yellow, we can just guess that its there based on the relative red-ness and green-ness of the light

    However, it is very lucky for monitor manufacturers that we’re so easily ‘fooled’

    • @cuchilloc
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      15 hours ago

      Isn’t violet / purple the made up one ?

    • @[email protected]
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      916 hours ago

      That’s not really true, we can definitely see yellow light. Red receptors and green receptors are both sensitive to it, which your brain correctly interprets as yellow.

      • @AdrianTheFrogOP
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        110 hours ago

        yea, if there is a single wavelength and its yellow we could see it. However, if you had a full spectrum of light and took away all of the yellow but added some red and green you wouldn’t be able to tell that there’s no yellow, because we can’t see yellow, only imply it from the red-ness and green-ness

        i’m pretty sure you couldn’t pull off the same trick with red, green, or blue but I guess I don’t really know

    • @Eheran
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      13 hours ago

      your eyes are being tricked into thinking there’s [something]

      That is what the brain does and it does it all the time with everything. You can have a simple B/W picture and you/your brain will see motion.

      • @angrystego
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        114 hours ago

        That’s not true though. Yellow is a very real wavelength. The fact that we don’t have unique receptors for it changes nothing about it’s nature. Also our eyes are not being tricked into anything, they just pass on the signal they get. Our brain sometimes plays tricks on itself. But interpreting red and green signal as yellow means getting closer to the physical truth, not further from it.

        • @Eheran
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          113 hours ago

          All receptors are always triggered for all wavelengths we can see, just some more than others. Different color have different ratios. An exactly 540 nm green light would still trigger all 3. It is all your brain doing the processing and those 3 primary colors of our usually 3 cone cells are the opposite of spectrally pure. Otherwise you would not even be able to see those mixed colors.