You mean they would look pink.
They would correspond to a wavelength agreed upon as "pink" even to an inanimate object.
So is the pink. You have to not look directly at the centre.
No. The pink corresponds to an agreed upon wavelength of "pinkness". What you perceive may not, but objectively, it is.
In my job, I do a lot of graphics work and when I show my work, there is, for the most part, objective agreement upon what the colors are. Even the color tables have color names next to them, so even a computer can recognize certain wavelengths as being certain colors.
Not in the objects themselves?? But everything we ever perceptually perceive is moulded by the brain. If we really saw colours as in the objects themselves, then the colours of objects would change throughout the day.
Colors do change throughout the day based on light conditions because color is based on reflected and absorbed light. A photo spectrometer would record this too. So you are correct that we don't see colors as in the objects themselves, but as the light that they absorb and reflect, based on several factors. But we can still objectively agree upon those colors.
Look, you say you know your car is a nice bright red and it remains red around the clock. But the light is not constant throughout the day. In the morning and evening, the light is considerably redder than at midday. When the sun is low in the sky, lots of blue light gets scattered away, because the sunlight has to penetrate a greater quantity of air when it passes through the atmosphere at an angle.
Um. Yes. I am aware of this. Also that the sky is not always blue. But at any given instant, it has a measurable color.
Yet your car appears to everyone to be equally red all day. This is despite the fact that the light our eyes receive from this car is not the same.
No, this is just the reverse of what you said. It appears to be (with some variation) the same color of red at the same time of day to most people who are observing it from the same point of reference. Also to a photo spectrometer or a camera.
In other words the red colour you perceive is illusionary.
Yes, in that the car is not physically in my brain. It's properties must be detected by my sensory apparatus and converted to nerve signals which are interpreted by my brain. We can agree to call that "illusory" if you like. Of course, my sensory apparatus are not perfect recorders and my brain is not a perfect translator, hence, we can fool them with things like optical illusions.
But for the most part, people agree on what colors are what. That certain wavelengths are being transmitted to your eyes is not illusory. It is measurable and quantifiable. That we, more often than not, can recognize those wavelengths and agree on what colors they are is also not illusory. If it were, the game of "Twister" would be impossible to play, and that would be a great loss.