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Red means stop

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Jerra | 11:44 Wed 28th Jul 2010 | Society & Culture
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but why does green mean go? Is it because they're opposite colours?
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You could just as well ask why Red means stop
It's probably a case of: red means danger; green means it's safe.
good question - I think the answer is 'probably' but I haven't been able to find anything definite.

http://en.wikipedia.o...ision_and_colorimetry

Red has long been used as a warning colour, perhaps because unlike blue and green it doesn't appear over a large area in nature (at least I can't think of any examples) and therefore stands out.
this piece says traffic lights may be derived from port and starboard lights for ships, but doesn't say where that came from

http://en.wikipedia.o...raffic_lights#History
This reminds me of a hobbyhorse of mine:

Looking at an old piece of electric cable it reminded me how sensible the colour-coding used to be:

RED for Line ('Live') - Red is the colour for danger

BLACK for Neutral - What is more neutral than black?

GREEN for Earth - Green for safety

Then some fatheaded committee or other got together and changed it all to the present system, which is:

BROWN for Line ('Live') - the colour of earth!

BLUE for Neutral - the symbolic colour of electricity!

YELLOW/GREEN for Earth - Quite meaningless.

Whereas the old system was self-evident, the new system is positively misleading.

And please don't say it is a help to colour-blind people. Pretty obviously such people should not be working on a job where getting the colours wrong could be lethal.
Interesting that, chakka. The 'new' way is the only way I've ever learned and I remember it because green/yellow is the 'different' one (i.e. earth) and blue is the nearest colour to the neutral colour green (I think the acid/alkali scale has green as neutral). Therefore brown has to be live.

Re traffic lights - red is hot fire (danger), green is cool grass (safe).

Interesting that the 'official' colour of a first aid kit/paramedic is green, and an industrial 'safe place' sign is yellow.
red is prosperity in China and mourning in southern Africa, as I recall. It may seem obviously heat/fire to us but other cultures think it just as obviously means something else.
anything to do with them being colours which can still be distinguised between if you are colourblind?
well, red/green is allegedly the most common form of colour blindness, and I've got it to the extent that I can't see dark red flowers on a dark red bush (our camellias for instance) but I've never had trouble distinguishing between the much brighter reds and greens of traffic lights, so I wouldn't have thought it would be a problem on wires if they were sufficiently different in tone.
Captin Kirk and jno, please read again the last sentence in my post.

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