- Aug 17, 2007
- 1,138
- 136
cool topic OP
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i was bout to say thisOriginally Posted by stylez23
jay-z blue
Ding Ding Ding...we have a winner...Originally Posted by Nawth21
It's all in perception. Bees see in UV.
I WAS THINKING BOUT THIS THE OTHER DAY
WE SEE WHAT OUR BRAIN WANTS US TO SEE AT THIS FREQUENCY
SO WHAT IS REALLY OUT THERE IN THE SPACE BETWEEN SPACES FROM WHAT WE SEE AS THE 3D ???
ANOTHER DIMENSION HAVE TO BE
There are "colors" that are imperceptible to the human eye. For example, infrared is a color YOU cannot see, and neither can Jordan Brand so don't be fooled. The world is composed of more than you could ever perceive. In fact, what you cannot perceive > what you can perceive.
Bees and many other pollinating insects are highly receptive these imperceptible "colors"...
I think that if we could see sound, sound might be representative of another color or various colors... Or maybe sound could also just result as a distortion of colors behind it. Maybe a different color can be realized in something that is constantly active - like extreeeeme heat. I'm not talking about Sun heat, but something that's waaay hotter - that we have not encountered, yet. Maybe there's another color there. But again, we have to have the capability to see it, right?
Just when I thought this thread had nothing left to give, the last four posts have been very influential on my thought process.
I appreciate the great insight folks.
Originally Posted by Lil Cao
trust I think about this a lot too. Then my head zones into the Adobe photoshop color pallete thinking there may be a color that doesn't fit in there.
Anyways, they might not even be the normal "colors" we see.. they might be different NEONS or GLOWS. Like in a video game.. other planets might see stuff shiny. But other planets might not have red yellow and blue as the original palette.. their's might even be black purple and brown (starcraft lol).
The reason why we see the colors we see are because of our EYES. Not everyone sees color the same. For example.. dogs and snakes. Snakes detect heat. Dogs, I don't know, don't they see in black and white?
It's all in us.. how we perceive things, not how they are brought to us.
As with the trichromacy normal in humans, the gamut of colors that can be made with these primaries will not cover all possible colors.
Originally Posted by N O R E A G A
I have ALWAYS wondered that. Imagine how crazy that would be. A brand new color
Originally Posted by SuperAntigen
Ding Ding Ding...we have a winner...Originally Posted by Nawth21
It's all in perception. Bees see in UV.
There are "colors" that are imperceptible to the human eye. For example, infrared is a color YOU cannot see, and neither can Jordan Brand sodon't be fooled. The world is composed of more than you could ever perceive. In fact, what you cannot perceive > what you can perceive.
Bees and many other pollinating insects are highly receptive these imperceptible "colors"...
...