Which means, once again, that no one--not Palmer, not me, not ruby, not anyone--can prove that the color isn't intrinsic to the object. Once again, all we can do is infer from the available evidence.
Since proof has never been on the agenda and has in fact been ruled out, you're barking up a straw tree. The matter is unresolved and I bet we're not going to resolve it here.
Once again, category error. Color is not the same type of phenomenon as pain, ....
Since it has been accepted that pain is (a) not the same as colour, and (b) might not be (we don't know and can't assume) in the same category vis-a-vis locations of properties, you're arguably barking up another straw tree. It was explicitly introduced as a comparison or analogy and the point has been made several times that it may be a different matter. In fact, I asked for ways pain could be different that would specifically indicate why it was (presumably or more often presumed to be, or conceived as being) not
'out there' (outside the brain, or the organism in pain, not in the stimuli or inanimate objects themselves in other words) while colour was, because that might be interesting to discuss.
For balance, the comparison with forms, shapes and lengths was also offered, and unlike pain and fear, it was suggested that these are examples of phenomena which although being experienced in the brain, are not only in the brain.
So pain and fear are candidate precedents of
'phenomena that are only brain experiences', and forms, shapes and lengths are candidates for
'phenomena that are not only brain experiences'. Point being to explore what is it that would make something one or the other of those, in some ways to explore the longstanding division of properties, by some thinkers, into secondary and primary, respectively.
You could perhaps say that in my model, the properties of light are secondary when it comes to colour, in that they can cause colour (in brains) but are not themselves colour. But I am not necessarily using or tying myself to any particular traditional paradigm of primary and secondary properties (eg Locke's).
Note: it has been suggested, not by me, that we could say that even forms, shapes and lengths are purely brain creations, but it wasn't explored and I myself am not yet sure I would say it, though I have been thinking about it, and it might be the case. I'm not sure what I think on that.
....unless you are talking EXCLUSIVELY about the brain's ability to ASSOCIATE.
I think that's referring to how it works in your model, not mine. In some ways, they are similar but opposite models. You can tell me if I get yours wrong. I think you seem to have it that brain colours are associated with (or mimic or copy) actual colours of objects and lights? In a way, you seem to be saying that the external colours (in objects or light) come first, or are primary. If so, I have it the other way around, that supposed colours of objects or lights are in fact either illusory or erroneous associations with actual brain colours (which have been caused, at least in part, by light input that has properties other than colour). I have it that as regards colours, the brain experiences came first (albeit after the various chain of processes involved in their creation in the brain), and are the only, actual, real colours.
What you keep defaulting to is the experience that the acquired information from a given signal triggers in the brain. You are NOT talking about blue; you are talking about the experience of blueness.
Why is this distinction so difficult for you?
Because I'm not using your model or descriptors. In my model, there is only one real, actual colour, and that's the one that's in brains. As such, it's not merely
'the experience of blueness' (although it is that), it's all that blue is and only what it is. That's the model I'm putting forward.
I'm saying the naming of objects (and light) as blue is essentially an error, based on an illusion of location. Other than that it may be a convenient naming convention.
Is "love" the word and "love" the feeling the same thing? Are words and feelings in the same category? If I keep talking about "love" when I mean the word and you keep talking about "love" when you mean the feeling are we talking about the same things?
No.
So it's ok to do different categories after all.
But seriously, I have no objection to comparisons or analogies. The love one is interesting. I have accepted it as an analogy/comparison to explore.
I'm good with saying there's at least some sort of information about love in the word love (or the equivalent word in any shared language). I'd be as happy to say that there is some information about pain in the word pain, and indeed that there is some information about colour in the word colour. So it's ok, imo, to put pain, fear and love in the same general category of 'things that are only brain experiences but about which at least some relevant information can be transmitted in other forms' (be it words, smoke signals or electro-electronic waves or what have you).
But would you ever say that the word green was itself green? I guess you might if you were a synesthesic but not otherwise.
Because that's what you're saying about objects and light, you're saying
'they are green' and you talk about the
'actual colour' of objects or light.
I have some issues with that. To me (better to say, in the model I am suggesting), as I tried to say above, it's cart before horse. I'm proposing that we only call objects green because they merely appear to us to match the only real green that's in our heads, and furthermore that it's an illusion that they are out there on or in the object, or indeed in light (an idea that came much later, and imo an interesting conceptual switch for several reasons, not least that it kept the colour, erroneously imo, 'out there', as if the very idea that it was out there had to be maintained, because it was so strongly intuitive).
By contrast, I might be ok with saying that certain things contain colour information, but that's different from saying that they actually are the colour in question, especially if, as seems to be the case with for example sunlight, the same 'information' also contributes to non-visual phenomena (eg making vitamin D). So there is the interesting question of whether the information is specific to colour production or more general. The more general it is, the less reason there would be to call it colour information, strictly-speaking, let alone calling it an actual colour. We might better say
'it has information (or properties) that are useful for, amongst other things, colour-making'.