Humans are "trichromatic," meaning we see a blend of three primary colors. However, we are blind to the vast majority of the light spectrum.
Sight is the only sense that can travel across the universe. While touch is limited to your skin and hearing to the vibration of the air around you, your eyes can catch photons that began their journey from a star millions of light-years away.
You are looking at "ghosts" of light from hundreds of years in the past. Hidden Spectrums Humans are "trichromatic," meaning we see a blend
Here is a look at the strange, beautiful mechanics of how we see: The Brain’s Best Guess
can see ultraviolet light, revealing "landing strips" on flowers that are invisible to us. While touch is limited to your skin and
see infrared, essentially seeing the "heat" signatures of their prey in total darkness.
We don’t actually "see" with our eyes; we see with our visual cortex. The data the eye sends to the brain is actually quite messy—it’s upside down, distorted by the curve of the lens, and has a massive "blind spot" where the optic nerve attaches. Your brain essentially acts as a world-class editor, flipping the image, filling in the gaps, and smoothing out the jitters to create a seamless movie of reality. The Color Illusion see infrared, essentially seeing the "heat" signatures of
Sight is our most dominant sense, consuming about when our eyes are open. It is the bridge between the physical self and the infinite distance of the horizon. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more