Christmas In The Good Old Days
ChatterBank13 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Haitch. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My wife Helen and I were discussing, over a couple of drinks, how good the �fireside red� in our newly painted dining room looked. She said, how could we know that we are both seeing the same colour? I gave what I thought was a good answer but she would have none of it. What do you think of my spur of the moment idea? I said that a bird (or many other animals) must know that a red insect is dangerous. They must know that innately and not be taught it unless every parent teaches every chick that each red insect, caterpillar or berry is dangerous and if that is the case why do some non poisonous animals imitate the colours of dangerous ones for protection. So assuming they know it innately they must perceive two separate things, firstly that red is dangerous and that what they are looking at is red. If their perception of red does not exactly match the danger colour in their minds, they will eat the red insect (and die). For example, if the dangerous colour they inherited were green, they would eat red insects or berries (and die). Conversely, if they thought the dangerous colour was red but saw green then they would eat the insect (and die). It would be an odd coincidence (but very lucky) if they thought the dangerous colour was green and perceived red to be green! Therefore, natural selection must have sorted out all of our ancestors who thought it was okay to eat red insects or berries. QED I thought. But Helen would not have it because strawberries are delicious.