Michal Piekarczyk

9%
Flag icon
In Through the Language Glass, the linguist Guy Deutscher reports that many primitive populations, without being color-blind, have verbal designations for only two or three colors. But when given a simple test, they can successfully match strings to their corresponding colors. They are capable of detecting the differences between the various nuances of the rainbow, but they do not express these in their vocabularies. These populations are culturally, though not biologically, color-blind.
Michal Piekarczyk
Hmm. I thought these people cannot actually see the differences because they don’t name them colors
Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder (Incerto, #4)
Rate this book
Clear rating