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Everything posted by Furyan5
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Required to make objects visible. We need light to see objects. It's the objects which are visible, not the light. Please read that... True. 17 pages and people still can't tell the difference between detection (when light falls on the retina) and seeing (when we perceive the minds model of an object). Detecting something that (falls on you) is called feeling, not seeing. I know some people are "slow", but this is bordering on ridiculous. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
So how can light be visible? Please read that as many times as you need until it sinks in...- 416 replies
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Do you always avoid answering questions? Studiot suggested this. I think it's a brilliant idea. I responded with this. ( Perfect, so let's do that. What properties make things visible? 1: they must reflect or emit light. Does light do either? No! 2: they must be big enough to be seen. How big is a photon? No size. 3: they must be slow enough to be seen. How fast is light? It's the fastest thing in the universe. Any one of these is enough to make an object invisible. Yet some people adamantly cling to the belief that we can see light.) Can someone respond please! If I'm wrong somehow, show me. If you can't, don't bother responding. This myth is busted!- 416 replies
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
No. Ignoring cold hard facts in favour of conventional beliefs is an impasse. None so blind as those who do not want to see. What scares you? Being wrong? Even Einstein was wrong on occasion. The world won't end if you admit that detection is not sight. "Why Mr Anderson, why? Why do you persist with this delusion? The 'visible light spectrum' is the range of light 'by which humans see'. Not the range of light we see. It's called visible light because 'it makes objects visible'. Accept it. You we're wrong. We can't see light.- 416 replies
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
'Cough' Did you miss the rest of it? Or are you ignoring it because the facts don't match up with your current beliefs? This is the power of preconception. You have no answer, so your mind blocks it out. I'll repeat it. Perfect, so let's do that. What properties make things visible? 1: they must reflect or emit light. Does light do either? No! 2: they must be big enough to be seen. How big is a photon? No size. 3: they must be slow enough to be seen. How fast is light? It's the fastest thing in the universe. Any one of these is enough to make an object invisible. Yet some people adamantly cling to the belief that we can see light. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
You're almost there. You understand that colors only exist in the mind. Now you only have to realize that the 'perceived objects' are also constructs of the mind. The reality you perceive is not outside you. You see the construct. Your whole life you only perceive the construct. This is beyond the others, but I believe it's within your grasp, even if you disagree at first. Perfect, so let's do that. What properties make things visible? 1: they must reflect or emit light. Does light do either? No! 2: they must be big enough to be seen. How big is a photon? No size. 3: they must be slow enough to be seen. How fast is light? It's the fastest thing in the universe. Any one of these is enough to make an object invisible. Yet some people adamantly cling to the belief that we can see light. Logical? I think not. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
How much longer will it take you to realize the we 'see' objects, when our eyes 'detect' light. We perceive the object, we infer the light. Detecting light is part of the visual process but the purpose of vision is to allow us to see things. Seeing things gives us an evolutionary advantage. Our retina detects light that strikes it. Seeing is the ability to perceive an object without making physical contact with the object. If light must 'strike' our eyes to be detected, that is not seeing. That's feeling. We detect light. We see objects. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
I will say this only once. You're confusing the Orange you see (which is the mind model) with the Orange (outside our bodies) which reflects light. The mind only creates the mind model if our eyes detect (not see) light coming from the 'outside' orange. If, as you claim, we see light, then we don't see objects. Only light is visible and objects are invisible. According to your claim, oranges are invisi ble. This is the contradiction -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Agreed, but my opinion doesn't contradict itself. My opinion doesn't claim we can see size-less, colourless and incredibly fast EMR. Opinion. Again.- 416 replies
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Actually, you're the only one who disagrees and thereby, holding everyone back. You're excused!- 416 replies
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Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
So, since we all agree that light has no color, how can we see it? 540nm is the wavelength, not the amplitude. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Correct. Technically, color is the property of the object, which causes it to absorb or reflect certain wavelengths of light. What we call colors, like red, yellow and green, are actually hues. So objects have colors and we perceive hues. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Or, orange is a visual sensation created by our brain -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Many is shrimps lack the mental capacity to perceive as many colors as humans. They actually see no better than dogs. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
That's your opinion. Nothing more, nothing less. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
And, there is no pink wavelength -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Would a quote from Isaac Newton himself convince you? Optiks 1701. "For the waves themselves are not coloured." Thank you. Read carefully. It says "Since this narrow band of wavelengths is the means by which humans see, we refer to it as the visible light spectrum". It's not the light we see. It's the light which allows us to see. need more? -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
You ask, and I answer. I'm talking to three people. Only one comment is directed at you. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Lol really? BeeCee says exactly that. Scroll up a bit. Btw, I never claimed colors are the product of a single wavelength. I claimed that light itself has no color. I can only respond to one. You can respond to many. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Yes, please show me where you see this contradiction? And ask one question at a time. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Read the article again. It says exactly the same thing. Maybe you'll listen to a physicist.https://youtu.be/fQczp0wtZQQ Lol really? BeeCee says exactly that. Scroll up a bit. -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/illusory-color-andamp-the-brain-2008-05/ -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Wrong. Our eyes detect 630nm wavelength light and send electrochemical impulses to our brains visual cortex where our brain creates the sensation orange. Our eyes see nothing. They detect, they don't perceive. If 630nm light was orange, we would see it being reflected by the Orange in all directions. I know it's hard to let go of a preconception. It blinds you to the truth. The eye serves just one purpose. It converts light into an electrochemical signal. It doesn't interpret anything. It doesn't perceive anything. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3093457/Does-colour-exist-BRAIN-Book-argues-simply-construct-mind.html -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
I'm talking about an orange in direct sunlight. According to you, it reflects Orange light right? -
Light: visible or invisible?
Furyan5 replied to The_Believer1's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
If light had color, wouldn't you see Orange light radiating away from an orange in all directions? Why is only the light coming towards you orange?