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Single Idea 15061

[filed under theme 12. Knowledge Sources / B. Perception / 2. Qualities in Perception / d. Secondary qualities ]

Full Idea

As long as colour terms pick out fundamental physical properties, I would be willing to countenance their use in the description of Reality in itself, ..even if they are based on a peculiar form of sensory awareness.

Gist of Idea

Although colour depends on us, we can describe the world that way if it picks out fundamentals

Source

Kit Fine (The Question of Realism [2001], 8)

Book Ref

-: 'Philosophers' Imprint' [-], p.26


A Reaction

This seems to explain why metaphysicians are so fond of using colour as their example of a property, when it seems rather subjective. There seem to be good reasons for rejecting Fine's view.

Related Ideas

Idea 5456 Redness is not a property as it is not mind-independent [Ellis]

Idea 9118 The colour bands of the spectrum arise from our biology; they do not exist in the physics [Sorensen]

Idea 4049 The way in which colour experiences are evoked is physically odd and unpredictable [Goldman]


The 32 ideas with the same theme [qualities seeming to involve the observer]:

Some objects of sensation are unique to one sense, where deception is impossible [Aristotle]
Some knowledge is lost if you lose a sense, and there is no way the knowledge can be replaced [Aristotle]
Epicurus says colours are relative to the eye, not intrinsic to bodies [Epicurus, by Plutarch]
Non-graspable presentations are from what doesn't exist, or are not clear and distinct [Stoic school, by Diog. Laertius]
Changes in secondary qualities are caused by changes in primary qualities [Giles of Orleans]
Heat and colour don't exist, so cannot mislead about the external world [Galileo, by Tuck]
Tastes, odours and colours only reside in consciousness, and would disappear with creatures [Galileo]
Our sensation of light may not be the same as what produces the sensation [Descartes]
Boyle's term 'texture' is not something you feel, but is unobservable structures of particles [Boyle, by Alexander,P]
Boyle's secondary qualities are not illusory, or 'in the mind' [Boyle, by Alexander,P]
In my view Locke's 'textures' are groups of corpuscles which are powers (rather than 'having' powers) [Locke, by Alexander,P]
I suspect that Locke did not actually believe colours are 'in the mind' [Locke, by Heil]
Secondary qualities are simply the bare powers of an object [Locke]
We know objects by perceptions, but their qualities don't reveal what it is we are perceiving [Leibniz]
Secondary qualities conjure up, and are confused with, the sensations which produce them [Reid]
Colours and tastes are not qualities of things, but alterations of the subject [Kant]
I can make no sense of the red experience being similar to the quality in the object [Kant]
Armstrong suggests secondary qualities are blurred primary qualities [Armstrong, by Robinson,H]
Secondary qualities are microscopic primary qualities of physical things [Armstrong]
Lockean secondary qualities (unlike primaries) produce particular sensory experiences [McGinn]
Could there be a mind which lacked secondary quality perception? [McGinn]
Secondary qualities contain information; their variety would be superfluous otherwise [McGinn]
The utility theory says secondary qualities give information useful to human beings [McGinn]
If objects are not coloured, and neither are sense-contents, we are left saying that nothing is coloured [Robinson,H]
Shape can be experienced in different ways, but colour and sound only one way [Robinson,H]
If secondary qualities match senses, would new senses create new qualities? [Robinson,H]
Phenol-thio-urea tastes bitter to three-quarters of people, but to the rest it is tasteless, so which is it? [Crane]
Secondary qualities are just primary qualities considered in the light of their effect on us [Heil]
Colours aren't surface properties, because of radiant sources and the colour of the sky [Heil]
Although colour depends on us, we can describe the world that way if it picks out fundamentals [Fine,K]
The colour bands of the spectrum arise from our biology; they do not exist in the physics [Sorensen]
The taste of chocolate is a 'finer-grained' sensation than the taste of sweetness [Polger]