It is a question that most people have pondered at one time or another. Does everyone view colors in the same way? Of course there are people with color blindness and other disorders that can change their perception of color. People can take Protanope and Deutanope tests that can test their color blindness. We know that each person has a specific set of rods and cones which activate in a certain pattern in our retina that allows us to see color. But amongst everyone else with normal color vision, can we ever truly be sure that we are all seeing exactly the same thing as each other?
Why do you think that color blind people can’t see color?
Does everyone view colors in the same way?
Could you ever describe a color in a way that would make that person see the color in their mind?
I think everyone views colors slightly differently because we all are slightly different so our eyes could develop differently as well.
ReplyDeleteI think that it might just be in our brains gow we percieve color rather than in our actual eyes
ReplyDeleteI wonder if our brains an eyes will ever evolve to where we can all see every thing the same not have color blindness or blindness.
ReplyDeleteJoe West
I think that someone who is colorblind is colorblind because they do not possess a certain cone, that usually would allow a person to see color
ReplyDeleteSara Delano
I wonder if some time down the future they will figure out a way to almost replace whatever part makes color blind people not see them correctly and fix it.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if some time down the future they will figure out a way to almost replace whatever part makes color blind people not see them correctly and fix it.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if some time down the future they will figure out a way to almost replace whatever part makes color blind people not see them correctly and fix it.
ReplyDeleteDo those colorblind glasses actually work?
ReplyDeleteJake Dunbar
I don't think everyone views a color in the same way. and do you think the way you see colors is passed down through genes?
ReplyDeleteI think that advancement in neural technology will one day allow scientists to prove that when people with about the same number of rods and cones are perceiving colors the same way. From an evolutionary stand point it doesn't make sense that we are all seeing colors differently because early on before langue beings who see things the same way would have a huge advantage over those that don't.
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