Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
Is this is a question of language shaping perspective, or perspective shaping language? English has dozens if not hundreds of finely-gradiated colour terms, there's nothing built-in to the language which dictates we treat any given selection of these as more fundamental.And it's a nice clean case of that thing some poster was asking for a few days back: the impact of languages on how we think.
It was when we were talking about so much science being done in English and whether that matters. Gotta track that back down.
OK: SS-18 ICBM over in Dumb and Stupid Quotes.
Consider that English didn't use to have words for "purple" and "orange", implying that English-speakers didn't used to see these as fundamental colourful-categories. Did the adoption of these words change how we thought? If so, why didn't "turquoise" or "crimson" become fundamental colour-categories? It seems more likely that our way of thinking about colour changed, and language followed suit.
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