you are not only color blind... you also can't read...
5 m' F* \7 Z4 `2 ^: ^* G, L# rlook at the bottom left of your own picture....
- u9 E: i, r. ]& R# G( F
. I: Y- ^5 v% T: p3 ` K8 Ltvb now,tvbnow,bttvbin case you have no idea, look at the red triangle in the below picture...:tu ...tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb+ w3 {: I) u9 r4 F' c3 E
Pedestrian_A 發表於 2016-6-2 09:34 AM 
orange指鹿為馬... i mean 指黃為橙
) g, C9 x' a0 a1 vPedestrian_A 發表於 2016-6-2 09:36 AM  1 l2 I6 t: @( y1 h2 R' ~2 V8 W6 t {
different people see the same illuminated object or light source in different ways. 公仔箱論壇* P1 e6 ]: _" M4 e8 K. ]
if you only live in the primitive colours world , not the real world, do not presuming the whole world have to forget about the difference shades of colour, the mechanisms of colour vision, the types of colour appearances, the individual differences among colour perceivers.公仔箱論壇0 s4 F6 E6 P; y
) }8 }' a% B( M: y
/ L2 A1 V) U9 X7 P公仔箱論壇i bet you haven’t study colours: the underlying mechanisms for the linguistic practices whereby colour terms name the relevant properties.
/ a# `( l: b! G- |0 k8 N* rPrimitivism: Colours are ‘primitive’ properties—simple, qualitative properties that physical bodies possess or appear to possess.
9 O' H# }- F) W; l" u z5 x. v9 ZReductive Physicalism: Colours are ‘hidden’ properties of bodies—complex, physical properties that dispose bodies to look orange, yellow, etc.公仔箱論壇- i& n2 f, M; T3 }! k1 u h
Dispositionalism: Colours are perceiver-dependent, dispositional properties—powers to look in distinctive ways to appropriate perceivers, in appropriate circumstances.
& w7 t3 i- N7 vos.tvboxnow.comProjectivism: Colours are subjective qualities ‘projected’ onto physical objects and light-sources—qualities which visual experiences represent objects as having.6 V" _! {9 B* T& U
Subjectivism: Colours are subjective qualities—either qualities presented in experience or qualities of experiences. |