Human

  • Overview of agent subjectivity
  • Basic information, e.g. needs, physiology, location, habitat traits
  • Related narratives and featured notes

Sensing (Private)

  • "Normal" human senses
  • "Abnormal" perception, e.g., caused by neurological or physiological injury or malformation

Colour

The human eye can distinguish something on the order of 7 to 10 million colors — that's a number greater than the number of words in the English language (the largest language on Earth).1

The visible spectrum of colours visible to the human eye is a subset of the electromagnetic spectrum.

  • Oliver Sachs2
    • Case about painter who loses colour vision after a car accident.
    • Blind patients who perceive only colours when their sight is first restored.

1: Sacks, Oliver. An Anthropologist on Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales. 1st ed. New York, NY: Knopf, 1995.


Footnotes

  1. Elert, Glenn. The Physics Hypertextbook. Brooklyn, NY: Glenn Elert, 1998–. https://physics.info/color/.˄


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