by Stardance » Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:19 am
Personally, I don't see the "illusion" even when the two squares are connected with a rectangle that allegedly contains the "same color" as the respective squares. Square A has a relatively dark shade of what appears to be "gray", and Square B has a relatively light shade of what appears to be "gray", i.e., the color of the respective squares is the same, just the shade is different. With the rectangle, Square A has a somewhat lighter shade of gray than without the rectangle, but it is still darker than Square B; the rectangle does not appear to have a uniform shade of gray in all of its area, and Square B has a lighter shade of gray than the rectangle.
Note that the "color" is not in the ROYGBIV spectrum. Does the "illusion" work for shades of other colors such as red or blue??
So, what is the "illusion"?? Is the "shadow" cast by the cylinder supposed to affect how the color of Square B is perceived?? To me, at least, the two squares are not identical in appearance, and the case has not been made that they are identical in fact. FWIW, I am red-green "color blind", and I have excellent discrimination of black/white and all "shades of gray" between the total absence of light (black) and the total presence of light that comprises all colors of the spectrum in combination (white).
Personally, I don't see the "illusion" even when the two squares are connected with a rectangle that allegedly contains the "same color" as the respective squares. Square A has a relatively dark shade of what appears to be "gray", and Square B has a relatively light shade of what appears to be "gray", i.e., the color of the respective squares is the same, just the shade is different. With the rectangle, Square A has a somewhat lighter shade of gray than without the rectangle, but it is still darker than Square B; the rectangle does not appear to have a uniform shade of gray in all of its area, and Square B has a lighter shade of gray than the rectangle.
Note that the "color" is not in the ROYGBIV spectrum. Does the "illusion" work for shades of other colors such as red or blue??
So, what is the "illusion"?? Is the "shadow" cast by the cylinder supposed to affect how the color of Square B is perceived?? To me, at least, the two squares are not identical in appearance, and the case has not been made that they are identical in fact. FWIW, I am red-green "color blind", and I have excellent discrimination of black/white and all "shades of gray" between the total absence of light (black) and the total presence of light that comprises all colors of the spectrum in combination (white).