#1
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The color pink does not exist
That's right. Pink is actually not in the light spectrum, it is a figment of our minds.
http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/sci...entary_bizarre |
#5
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Brown also doesn't exist on the spectrum. =P
Tints and shades of any color don't physically exist. Things like light blue and dark green and stuff. They're just variations in the intensity of the color. In a way, pink is light red. Think Red vs. Blue. lol Last edited by Armads; April 16, 2011 at 11:33:04 AM. |
#6
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Well, when you think about it, pink isn't really in between violet and red (which is where it goes in electronic color pickers), and it isn't a different shade of anything (like brown is a darker shade of orange), so that's actually some creepy **** right there.
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#9
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Quote:
---now for my 2˘ on the matter--- In the end all of these things we see simply don't exist at all and only exist in organic minds so it doesn't really matter if pink doesn't exist on the electromagnatic spectrum. |
#10
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Quote:
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#12
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My definition could've been applied to the universe not just all colors. I was speaking of the mind's interpretation of the observed universe and how pink exists because the mind sees it (which could be applied to anything else)
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#18
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Pink, although not on the electromagnetic spectrum, is a hue making it not a primary or secondary color. By the standard of art it is not a color, but the standard of art only applies to art students and scholars making it irrelevent to students of other electives and majors. However the standard of art does affect our everday life. Pink is combination of a color (red) and a mediator (white). Unfortunately, pink is not a TRUE color.
Last edited by MaRcHiNg12step; April 24, 2011 at 04:41:11 PM. |
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