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“I see trees of green,” croons Louis Armstrong. “Red roses, too.” He gazes up at skies of blue and clouds of white, then back down at the iridescent sea of humanity around him – and he marvels at the wonder of a world full of color, enduring despite the darkness lingering just over the horizon.
When I think of this song now, I’m tempted to think of it as an exercise in perspective: You can look at the bright side or the dark side of something, and one is just as real as the other. It’s all relative, and there are no absolutes – just attempts to persuade someone else to see things your way. Color is a prime example. Whether the dress was yellow and white or black and blue (remember that debate that tore the internet apart in 2015?) was, ultimately, up to the eye of the beholder.
But there’s a case to be made that colors are “as objective as length and temperature,” philosophers Elay Shech and Michael Watkins of Auburn University argue. And it doesn’t take all that much mind-bending to prove it. “To determine whether two objects have the same color, an observer would need to view the objects side by side against the same background and under various lighting conditions,” they write. Ask someone else whether those objects are the same color – and you’ll get some “compelling evidence” that “colors are objective features of our world.”
Do I see the same trees of green as Armstrong or you? Probably not – but it is wondrous, I agree, that color persists, no matter what shade is thrown upon it.
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What appear to be blue and green spirals are actually the same color.
Akiyoshi Kitaoka
Elay Shech, Auburn University; Michael Watkins, Auburn University
An object’s color appears differently under different lighting and against different backgrounds − for different viewers. But that doesn’t mean colors are subjective.
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Science + Technology
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Chris Impey, University of Arizona
An astronomer breaks down 3 key components that allow researchers to make groundbreaking discoveries – and decide when results aren’t significant.
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Politics + Society
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Daniel Hall, Miami University
President Donald Trump has said that free speech matters to him. But his record during his second presidential term doesn’t show that commitment.
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Alexander Lowie, University of Florida
The growth of alt-right activist groups and the state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic are two factors that help explain Florida’s politics.
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International
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Linda E. White, Middlebury
Having to give up their maiden names has a real-world impact for Japanese women in the workplace.
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Health + Medicine
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Katherine Ann James, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
A prolonged drought in the San Luis Valley has contributed to kidney issues in agricultural workers.
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Arts + Culture
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Jennifer Tucker, Wesleyan University; Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University
Trump often casts himself as a man of the people. But his statue garden feeds into a ‘great man’ approach to history at the expense of local and state history.
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Education
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Erika Squires, Wayne State University; Lucy (Kathleen) McGoron, Wayne State University
In moderation, watching educational TV shows, movies and apps can boost language development among young children. 2 experts explain.
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Environment + Energy
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Emmanuel Olugbade, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Battery management systems now blend physics and machine learning, delivering real‑time insights to boost safety, efficiency and lifespan even under heavy use.
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Ethics + Religion
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Cora Fox, Arizona State University
The meaning of ‘happiness’ was in flux in Shakespeare’s England, and his plays capture many senses of the word.
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