Quote:
You’ll be able to clearly see that A and B are the same color.
Unless you believe that mspaint.exe has hidden software to transform the colors copied via the select tool, this exercise is compelling proof of Popular and Adelson’s claim.
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I still dissagree. Of course the colors could be the same when you seperate them. But when you mix colors together and those frequencies compile on your retina, you get mixed information.
Color only exists in your mind, which is why what you see is always the truth. It may be a mixture of frequencies that developes a harmonic of color..
The same idea is to watch a car drive away in a very colorful enviroment, the further it gets the less you know about its exact color, your get mixed data.