Gawdzilla Sama
Valued Senior Member
♫Communication Breakdown♫
An interesting effect you can observe is if you shine a colored light on an object and project its shadow on a white surface. The color of that shadow will be the complimentary color of the color of the light. Red light for instance produces green shadows. But a shadow is still just darkness, the absence of the red light in this case.
Yes, this too.the green color isn't physically "there" like the red light is. It isn't being generated by the wavelength of any light. But we see it anyway. A case of a perceived color being totally generated by the brain.
That is a different "darkness," here in your example this means depth of colour. How many coats or how concentrated is your colour?One can certainly speak of darkness as a property.
For example, in painting. Subtractive colours certainly can have some colours darker than others, and you can increase that darkness by the addition of more black.
That's a real property of a real thing.
Green: View attachment 6373 Dark green: View attachment 6374
Maybe that's because it's a whole lot easier to add black to paint to make it darker rather than trying to remove the white.One can certainly speak of darkness as a property.
For example, in painting. Subtractive colours certainly can have some colours darker than others, and you can increase that darkness by the addition of more black.
That's a real property of a real thing.
Green: View attachment 6373 Dark green: View attachment 6374
"Different"? from what?That is a different "darkness,"
Of course.Maybe that's because it's a whole lot easier to add black to paint to make it darker rather than trying to remove the white.
That would change the tone, to make a colour darker you simply increase the concentration.Maybe that's because it's a whole lot easier to add black to paint to make it darker rather than trying to remove the white.
Shadow was mentioned but since the OP was nebulous to begin with I think we are splitting hairs."Different"? from what?
The OP did not specify a specific type of darkness; that was an constraint replaced by subsequent posters. "The absence of light" was a flavour not introduced until post 5.
(COMMENT)If it isn't and it's physical, then what's it made of? Can it be measured? Does it occupy space? What is its velocity?
If it is and it's non-physical, how can we perceive it? CAN we see darkness? How can a shadow carry information about its object?
Bonus question: Is a mirror in a totally dark room reflecting the darkness in front of it or is it showing the darkness inside of it?
Follow up question: Is cold a non-physical property?
(COMMENT)Darkness falls fast in the tropics.
Seriously, darkness is the absence of light. I.e. an abstract concept. Philosophers warn us about assigning too much reality to abstractions - they call it reification.
I literally just pointed out how it is a property, in post 47. I even showed a sample.Darkness is NOT a property. It has to be defined by the frequencies or energy that is absent.
(COMMENT)I literally just pointed out how it is a property, in post 47. I even showed a sample.
"Scientific"? How is analysis of paint colours any less scientific than analysis of light bulb colours?I wish to express my open apology. I mistakenly assumed this was an implied "Scientific" discussion and not a discussion of artificially reflecting surface colorings like paint in shades from black to that shade reflecting what is called white.
The OP was definitely referring the darkness when light is removed.I literally just pointed out how it is a property, in post 47. I even showed a sample.
Still, this is the philosophy forum and the OP was asking a broad, ill-defined question. I think it is perfectly valid to explore the leaky margins of the question in search of enlightenment.The OP was definitely referring the darkness when light is removed.
Is a mirror in a totally dark room reflecting the darkness in front of it or is it showing the darkness inside of it?"
Right. Which isn't any less valid than "does a mirror show the darkness inside it?""Darker" colour does not mean with the light removed, it simply means "deeper" Like going from pink to red
[...] If it is and it's non-physical, how can we perceive it? CAN we see darkness? How can a shadow carry information about its object? [...]
No. The sky is blue due primarily to Rayleigh scattering - the tendency for bluer light to scatter more than red light due to the atmosphere. That scattering means that light that would otherwise go over our head, gets redirected toward us, and, since it's blue, it means we see a bluer sky.The sky is blue because it is a reflection of the ultraviolet light hitting the Ozone.
From one narrow perspective, if that's the way you choose to interpret it.RE: Is darkness a non-physical property?
"Is darkness a non-physical property?" From a technical aspect, the answer is "no."
This might be one of those chats where phenomenology collides with scientific tries at objective description. Darkness seems to be phenomenal (something brains derive from perceptual inputs), but we try to take it beyond this abstraction and determine objective absences of, say, visible light, thus defining a phenomenon by its opposite. (we do this with "cold," too)Thus, "darkness" is a quantifiable, controllable, repeatable property of colour.
Right. Because, as the argument has been going, it is a property of thing, not a thing itself.We don't find a chemist who will separate out all the compounds in paint and then produce one on a little sample tray and say "here is the darkness!" (or if she does, then we take it as metaphor, not a literal substance with the unique property of darkness)