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(2002) Synthese 133 (3).

Revelation and transparency in colour vision refuted

a case oo mind/brain identity and another bridge over the explanatory gap

William Robert Webster

pp. 419-439

Russell (1912) and others have argued that the real nature of colour is transparentto us in colour vision. It's nature is fully revealed to us and no further knowledgeis theoretically possible. This is the doctrine of “revelation”. Two-dimensionalFourier analyses of coloured checkerboards have shown that apparently simple,monadic, colours can be based on quite different physical mechanisms. Experimentswith the McCollough effect on different types of checkerboards have shown thatidentical colours can have energy at the quite different orientations of Fourierharmonic components but no energy at the edges of the checkerboards, thusrefuting revelation. It is concluded that this effect is not explained by a superveniencedispositional account of colour as proposed by McGinn (1996). It was argued that theMcCollough effect in checkerboards was an example of a local mind/body reduction(Kim 1993), by which the different characteristics of identical colours falsifies revelation. This reduction being based on both physical and neurological mechanisms led to a clear explanation of the perceive phenomenal effects and thus laid a small bridge over the explanatory gap.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1021294209237

Full citation:

Webster, W. (2002). Revelation and transparency in colour vision refuted: a case oo mind/brain identity and another bridge over the explanatory gap. Synthese 133 (3), pp. 419-439.

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