One of the most disturbingly creepy things I've realized is when looking at render of a laser scanned environment. The oddly bumpy and uneven gray mass that everything show up as. That is actually reality. The filtered colorful smooth version we see is an arbitrary specific wavelength interpretation that our brains developed. We are actually living in that creepy gray horror movie render of the laser scan.
Video on the internet was not a popular thing until we had broadband internet. Similarly it took millions of years for evolution to capitalize on the much broader bandwidth of color vision. I don't even want to know what will happen when we acquire infrared and uv vision
Did they purposely ignore dinosaurs? Feathered dinosaurs are known to be colorful
https://www.reuters.com/article/world/chinese-rainbow-dinosa...
Hard to believe their claim fish are the first to evolve color for mating displays 100 million years ago.
>> Plant leaves, for example, reflect green light even if there are no eyes to see it
It seems that the logical colour for a leaf would be completely black - absorbing all energy. Fortunately that isn't how it worked out.
I wonder if the median vividness of coloration of species has trended downward since full spread of humans all over the globe. The brightest birds in the tropics were relatively easy meals to procure compared to more well-camoflauged species.
> They have evolved even in species that don’t have color vision, likely because their predators do.
I mean, that shouldn't be too surprising since plants don't have vision at all and still evolved colors.
A very interesting tidbit of information I’ve only learned/realized when I was already an adult, is that many otherwise plain flowers have really intricate patterns in the ultraviolet, since some insects see in that spectrum.
Before reading:
It seems obvious to me that colors came before color vision. Natural selection constrains diversity along the axes that it selects for, while genetic mutations supply diversity along all axes simultaneously. The net result would, intuitively for me, be that nature must have had the colors before anyone could see them, since there was no reason to constrain having colors.
We'll see if that ends up being anywhere close to correct.
Calvin and Hobbes addressed this:
https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd....