a reply to:
JJproductions
I'm at 175. Bluer than 68% of the population. My turquoise is stated to be 'green' and I would generally agree with this.
If you would like to have an interesting discussion, let's talk about the "color" black. I've written about this here on ATS many times and have also
been involved in some very scientific (and classified) studies about 'black' and some of its properties (and illusions). I don't have exact numbers,
but I think I'd be safe in saying 98+% of the world do not comprehend what black is.
For example (just an easy one), do you see black on your monitor? How can it possibly be black if it takes light (energy) to project it to you on
your monitor? What you perceive as black is an illusion. Black is not a color, but neither is red or blue. These colors are only the light
reflected back off of something. The wavelengths of light which were not reflected back were absorbed or deflected. Color is an illusion of our
mind. Black is the master of all of them because it is the complete absence of any color. So, if you see black, then what are you seeing? A
'reflection' of what?
The color black will absolutely bend your mind to the breaking point (when you really get into it)!
I'm not talking about super-black pigments like 'vanta-black' (which you may have heard of), but rather actual real black.
I've seen satellite pictures where the pixel densities are more than the human mind can comprehend. I know this sounds crazy (and we even had to sign
medical disclaimers to even see it). Imagine a picture of a city, say NYC. You look at it and see the whole city. Now imagine zooming in on this
same image...further and further. You pick a building, and then a window on the building, and then a single window sill on that window...and now down
to the grain of the painted wood on the window sill...and then down to the grains of a bird poop on that same window sill. Then, they zoom all the
way back out. I forget now how many pixels this one picture was but it was in the multi-gigapixel range. Your mind almost short circuits and you
feel like your brain is just in maximum overload (and you feel like you're going to pass out, and I'm not kidding either!). Part of how they
construct images like this is by removing extraneous color which fills in the blanks for your brain. The resolution is exponentially higher. Why?
Because...black. (no false color, you see everything, and I mean EV-ER-Y THING!) And that's just a primer for some of the stuff I'm talking
about!
Black is one of the most mysterious and misunderstood "colors" (it's not a 'color', it's more of a concept).
I was totally unprepared for some of the things we saw, not even close to anything I'd ever imagined possible (and I worked under NASA in the Shuttle
program). We saw projection techniques which present images in UHD resolution on a 'screen' over a half a MILE wide. Absolutely incredible stuff!
(the 'screen' was a series of grain silos in Nebraska).
Everything circled back to black, and how this 'concept' is so completely misunderstood. They weren't lying (and I can't even say who "they"
were).
Last point...a movie screen is silver, right? The "Silver Screen". If you turn the lights on in a movie theater, the screen looks grey (silver).
With a flashlight, on an angle, you will see reflective elements to the silver coating on the screen. Okay, now back to high school physics for a
minute...no matter what happens, any "light" projected against a silver coated screen cannot return a reflection any dimmer than the light projected
against it...right? So, how do you project the color black against a silver screen? It will always be lighter than the ambient light in the
room...otherwise...you wouldn't see it!
Just think about some of these concepts for a minute. Seriously, they will bend your entire mind. Is black even real?
I'll stop here.