Kate O'Neill

32%
Flag icon
Then he told them about the Purkinje effect—named for the Czech physiologist who had first described it, in the early nineteenth century. Purkinje had noticed that colors that appeared brightest to the human eye in broad daylight appeared the darkest at dusk. And so, for instance, what the rabbis saw as vividly red in the morning might appear, in contrast to other colors, almost colorless in the evening.
The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview