Buffalo wrote:
While you may know very little about these subjects, that doesn't mean that others don't know quite a lot about them ;)
OK.
Peace,
Ceeboo
Buffalo wrote:
While you may know very little about these subjects, that doesn't mean that others don't know quite a lot about them ;)
It is indeed. Now you're getting it.Chap wrote:Hoops wrote:YOu can stipulate what you wishWell, in fact I was trying to guess what conditions YOU had in mind when you suggested that someone might look at a cup, say 'that cup is blue', and be wrong about it. If you won't specify the conditions, your statement that
As I wrote before, I'll let you specifiy whatever conditions you wish. The conditions you stipulate are rather inconsequential to this discussion because no matter how you frame it, you are still left with the same problem.Just because you and ten of your friends see a blue cup on the table doesn't mean the cup is actually blue. Blue may only exist in your perception of it.
is pretty meaningless.
But when you say this:Independently, these wavelengths may be yellow.
ExactlyA wavelength is no more colored than a number can be salty or sweet. The only way wavelengths of electromagnetic waves get associated with colors is because you direct them into people's eyes, and then listen to what color name they utter. There is no other way of finding out. The idea that a wavelength that elicits the name 'blue' from all people with a normal complement of retinal cone cells is 'really' some other color is simply meaningless.
Ceeboo wrote:Ahhh Yes, the old "make the silly believer answer the global flood/age of the earth" question so we can illustrate, to each other, how dumb their total position really is. Ha- ha- ha- ha.
I would suggest that we (all of us) should at least consider the magnitude of how much we really do not know (while offering with complete certainty that we "know").
Ceeboo will be happy to answer the question: :)
I do not discard the global flood
I do not discard the YEC's stance that the age of the earth is 6,000-7,000 years.
I do not discard a literal account of Genesis
I do not discard those who subscribe to "yom" (day) being a period of time.
I do not discard those who debate that the literal 24 hour day did not begin until the sun and moon were created (day 3) thus giving the means and method by which to govern these 24 hour cycles.
While I know very, very little, I believe that there is a Creator/God that is behind it all and some day we all might have answers to the many, many mysterious questions we are all forced to ponder.
Did I answer the question?
Peace,
Ceeboo
Hoops wrote: Now you're getting it.
Ceeboo wrote:
I would suggest that we (all of us) should at least consider the magnitude of how much we really do not know (while offering with complete certainty that we "know").
Ceeboo will be happy to answer the question: :)
I do not discard the global flood
I do not discard the YEC's stance that the age of the earth is 6,000-7,000 years.
I do not discard a literal account of Genesis
I do not discard those who subscribe to "yom" (day) being a period of time.
I do not discard those who debate that the literal 24 hour day did not begin until the sun and moon were created (day 3) thus giving the means and method by which to govern these 24 hour cycles.
While I know very, very little, I believe that there is a Creator/God that is behind it all and some day we all might have answers to the many, many mysterious questions we are all forced to ponder.
Did I answer the question?
Peace,
Ceeboo
Hoops wrote:
You will note that Ceeboo is considerably more magnaminous and gracious than I am. I'm working on it, but I'm a long way from him.
Thank you, Ceeboo, for once again modeling how I should act, and not criticizing me for how I do act.
Chap wrote:
A wavelength is no more colored than a number can be salty or sweet. The only way wavelengths of electromagnetic waves get associated with colors is because you direct them into people's eyes, and then listen to what color name they utter. There is no other way of finding out. The idea that a wavelength that elicits the name 'blue' from all people with a normal complement of retinal cone cells is 'really' some other color is simply meaningless.
Chap wrote:Hoops wrote: Now you're getting it.
Getting what?
Kindly state your position on the epistemology of color vision clearly and unambiguously. That implies saying clearly and fully what the situation you are envisaging is, and then saying something definite about it. That you have so far failed to do.
Themis wrote:Chap wrote:
A wavelength is no more colored than a number can be salty or sweet. The only way wavelengths of electromagnetic waves get associated with colors is because you direct them into people's eyes, and then listen to what color name they utter. There is no other way of finding out. The idea that a wavelength that elicits the name 'blue' from all people with a normal complement of retinal cone cells is 'really' some other color is simply meaningless.
The other problem is that humans define what we expereince. Humans have defined what is blue, and is therefore blue because that is what we expereince and have defined as blue(not yellow). Hoops does seem to get it, but then I am not the best at explaining things. :)
Hoops wrote:Yep, we define what we experience. Are you telling me that all of reality is encompassed in your experience?
And then isn't your experience defining your empiricism?