Why The Ancient Greeks Couldn't See Blue

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  • Опубліковано 11 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22 тис.

  • @MessYourself
    @MessYourself 4 роки тому +28096

    this video blue my mind

    • @georgek4416
      @georgek4416 4 роки тому +205

      Lol, nice one.

    • @thefuturegamer5159
      @thefuturegamer5159 4 роки тому +132

      Why does this guy had 6 million subscribers but 2 replys

    • @jhonnasenrico9505
      @jhonnasenrico9505 4 роки тому +88

      Get ur ticket 🎫 here before this comment “BLUE” up

    • @cofinify
      @cofinify 4 роки тому +90

      @@thefuturegamer5159 because the joke was already in the description, he just stole it

    • @sakethmanakil17
      @sakethmanakil17 4 роки тому +36

      @@georgek4416 he stole it from the description

  • @KARATEbyJesse
    @KARATEbyJesse 4 роки тому +14593

    Ancient Japanese didn’t have a word for green. 🇯🇵 It was just a shade of blue. They still call the stoplights red and blue, even though it’s green! 🚦

    • @danravv
      @danravv 4 роки тому +1045

      Yeah, it confused me a lot when I lived in Japan. They also call green apples, "blue" apples.

    • @sophroniastopher15
      @sophroniastopher15 4 роки тому +216

      They know what's up

    • @sadisrmaacy4341
      @sadisrmaacy4341 4 роки тому +334

      what do you mean "even though its green". its as much their definition as our.

    • @ZZMJo
      @ZZMJo 4 роки тому +195

      Yellow+blue=green. Well, they are not wrong...

    • @slfanta
      @slfanta 4 роки тому +390

      Lol ancient Japanese,,, That's because ancient Chinese didn't have a word to distinguish blue and green. Both blue and green are described as the same color 青 in Chinese and also in Japanese 青い (Aoi)

  • @trustmeimmexican
    @trustmeimmexican 4 роки тому +28710

    Because, back then, everything was black and white. Trust me. I've seen it in movies.

    • @entityexisting
      @entityexisting 4 роки тому +1046

      As a kid,I actually believed this to be a fact for quite a while thanks to Charlie Chaplin..

    • @opedromagico
      @opedromagico 4 роки тому +118

      kkkkkk boa

    • @simon2776
      @simon2776 4 роки тому +136

      I learned that in Calvin and Hobbes.

    • @Yaakuwu
      @Yaakuwu 4 роки тому +96

      Oh shit you’re right

    • @amistake
      @amistake 4 роки тому +219

      I trust you, your mexican

  • @Amethyst770
    @Amethyst770 7 місяців тому +897

    "Tchelet" (sky blue) is mentioned repeatedly in the Old Testament in the book of Exodus in the plans for the Tabernacle and priestly garments.
    Also, lapis lazuli has been prized since antiquity as the colour of the gods. Blue sapphire stones were treasured, and also costly garments were dyed blue with dye made of snails.

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube 6 місяців тому +40

      The blue thread in the tassles/ tzitzit is definitely blue too.

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube 6 місяців тому +17

      @@foudroyaume he specifically mentions Hebrews in this video

    • @ChristinaFromYoutube
      @ChristinaFromYoutube 6 місяців тому +12

      @@Est.4_14 the person I replied to said "who asked about Hebrews?" (Something to that effect) And then apparently deleted their comment some time in the last 5 days.

    • @fabfran9999
      @fabfran9999 6 місяців тому +4

      oh hey same profile pic!

    • @cherylbristol5144
      @cherylbristol5144 6 місяців тому +3

      Colour blind? Did not know the colour exist? Flowers are also under the blue stream.

  • @irok1
    @irok1 4 роки тому +11880

    Can't wait for the sequel in 2020 years when they say "These people couldn't see the color Lepu"

    • @303Thatoneguy
      @303Thatoneguy 4 роки тому +736

      There are colors we can’t actually see tho

    • @cezarcatalin1406
      @cezarcatalin1406 4 роки тому +750

      Poke'mon Trainer Chri$$$ 303
      Yeah, you can’t see gamma rays...
      (And if you can, please leave the area you are sitting in immediately).

    • @303Thatoneguy
      @303Thatoneguy 4 роки тому +449

      @@cezarcatalin1406 too late becoming the hulk

    • @greencrystalsword3713
      @greencrystalsword3713 4 роки тому +176

      I would expect Lepu to be a maybe sapphire color... like a dark version on blue-green

    • @Ap1hw
      @Ap1hw 4 роки тому +312

      “How did they live without aprillion??”

  • @earburnerspodcast8002
    @earburnerspodcast8002 3 роки тому +11193

    Imagine being alive when the Blue DLC dropped.

    • @jas.per.25
      @jas.per.25 3 роки тому +190

      Glitch in the matrix

    • @perfectchild8073
      @perfectchild8073 3 роки тому +54

      Lmao

    • @DVDRAR
      @DVDRAR 3 роки тому +392

      UPDATES:
      Water is now blue to spot easily from far
      Sky is now blue to compliment the ocean
      Blue dyes are now available in the Egypt region
      Black objects are now blue

    • @zheter7990
      @zheter7990 3 роки тому +9

      Lmao

    • @damianmaver4128
      @damianmaver4128 3 роки тому +14

      Underrated comment

  • @fruitcake1513
    @fruitcake1513 4 роки тому +1257

    The language part is also seen when a child doesn’t recognise swearing until they know the word

    • @Cometsarecool
      @Cometsarecool 4 роки тому +25

      I watched Guardians of the Galaxy a lot as a kid. I did not know the words, sh*t, damn, b*tch, and a*s, were words.

    • @fatherdog346
      @fatherdog346 4 роки тому +46

      @MIA they couldve been 7 when it came out. i mean imo theyre still kids but they're an older kid

    • @evilhutdug4665
      @evilhutdug4665 4 роки тому +9

      @@fatherdog346 yeah but he said “when I was a kid” implying he was no longer a kid

    • @JosephFlores-yn4yi
      @JosephFlores-yn4yi 4 роки тому +7

      @@evilhutdug4665 he could had been 10

    • @xxJing
      @xxJing 4 роки тому +38

      I find the concept of swearing funny. They’re words that people want you to dogmatically avoid, but because they are taboo that very fact makes so many people want to use them. It’s like a self fulfilling prophecy.

  • @elisabenincaso
    @elisabenincaso 6 місяців тому +165

    As others have mentioned, ancient Greek statues and architecture were painted and not white. One of the colors used was blue. Apparently, they could see it well enough to paint with it.

    • @shawnsg
      @shawnsg 5 місяців тому +18

      The title is very clickbaity but the contents are still accurate. This isn't a particular contentious topic outside of UA-cam comments.

    • @lordmalal
      @lordmalal 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@shawnsgwrong. 😊

  • @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes
    @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes 3 роки тому +4770

    "The human brain is the most complicated thing in the universe."
    - The human Brain

    • @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes
      @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes 3 роки тому +7

      @@avetiq3905 I don't get it-

    • @Gen_-6012
      @Gen_-6012 3 роки тому +13

      @@Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes he was makeing a joke

    • @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes
      @Apollo_Dionysus_Hermes 3 роки тому +16

      @@Gen_-6012 *making
      Also, I can tell he's making a joke, I just don't get the reference

    • @nowonmetube
      @nowonmetube 3 роки тому +21

      This sounds so much like a Futurama joke, lmao 🤣

    • @generaza7609
      @generaza7609 3 роки тому +27

      Universe: I thought the inside of me was the most complicated in the universe.
      Multiverse: Nah...The inside part of me is the most complicated thing inside your Universe.
      Null Space (outside the Multiverse): oooooooooooh, I am getting a headache...

  • @RandomStuff-he7lu
    @RandomStuff-he7lu 4 роки тому +7829

    Redheads are called redheads even though they clearly have orange hair because English didn't have a word for orange until quite recently and so orange was once considered a shade of red and yellow.

    • @kaberite
      @kaberite 4 роки тому +582

      Orange colour was named after the fruit

    • @indraservo5764
      @indraservo5764 4 роки тому +192

      And today there are over 20 different names for color red

    • @HermanVonPetri
      @HermanVonPetri 4 роки тому +306

      And brown is just a dark shade of orange. Which means that brown headed people are just "red heads" with a darker shade of the pigment.

    • @nicomoist5336
      @nicomoist5336 4 роки тому +367

      Or how people were called black regardless of the actual skin tone is more brown

    • @GLASSB182
      @GLASSB182 4 роки тому +67

      Like "that fruit called an orange is the color, yellow-red." In retrospect is ideal.

  • @kungfuotta
    @kungfuotta 4 роки тому +30267

    Of course they couldn't see blue, history was all in black and white.
    I'm not falling for lies.

  • @drheathersebo1949
    @drheathersebo1949 9 місяців тому +284

    The details and decoration on early archaic Greek statues were painted with azurite which gives that brilliant blue colour, traces of which survive.

    • @mrcryptozoic817
      @mrcryptozoic817 6 місяців тому +14

      Good point. The color azure. Maybe we just don't recognize the color name when it appears in some languages.

    • @apo.7898
      @apo.7898 5 місяців тому

      @@mrcryptozoic817 It is just that anglogermanic scholars who studied the text were idiots.

    • @shawnsg
      @shawnsg 5 місяців тому

      And

    • @KS-xx5xq
      @KS-xx5xq 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@mrcryptozoic817Because azurite would be colour name. Im sure names in Your lang also have ethymology.

    • @KS-xx5xq
      @KS-xx5xq 4 місяці тому

      @I_dreamed_my_name_was_Brandon Sky colour changes depending on the time of the day, but I recon you have in mind light blue of midday cloudless day :)
      Maybe "sky" is in some language name of blue color, or some have ethymological connection to it?
      Actually in my country blue is "niebieski" and the sky is "niebiosa", but did not actually dwelled on that connection ever, they are just two different words you use everyday.
      Do you know from what word color "blue" derives in your language? Can you

  • @aliciakoepke560
    @aliciakoepke560 4 роки тому +435

    This actually makes so much sense. As a kid cyan was just blue, beige was yellow, lime was green, magenta was pink etc.

    • @rajanyapurohit5113
      @rajanyapurohit5113 4 роки тому +8

      wait, magenta isn't pink?

    • @WAanik
      @WAanik 4 роки тому +2

      As a colorblind adult, all those still resemble similar things.

    • @insoft_uk
      @insoft_uk 4 роки тому +6

      Magenta is 100% of Red and Blue totally different to Pink as that contains 100% red and then a certain equal % of Green and Blue, so Pink is a colour just not a true colour
      Brown is actually Dark Orange so another none true colour

    • @ninjawafflezz5356
      @ninjawafflezz5356 4 роки тому +4

      When I was a kid I would just refer to them as "Dark blue and light blue. Dark green and light green. Maybe ones darker than the dark one, guess the middle one is just green now."
      Magenta would have been "light purple" for me.

    • @ninjawafflezz5356
      @ninjawafflezz5356 4 роки тому +3

      @@rajanyapurohit5113 I always stuck it in between purple and pink. Idk if it really belongs there but that's what I did

  • @aarnaasharma6518
    @aarnaasharma6518 4 роки тому +3623

    Imagine 10 thousand years later somebody making a video :
    Why ancient millennials and Gen-Z's couldn't see the colour "Terp"

  • @_Envous
    @_Envous 4 роки тому +3288

    It’s 5020
    “Why these people couldn’t see Gyret, Brimple, Prattle, Bete, and Ornhack.”

  • @sandrokottos1060
    @sandrokottos1060 6 місяців тому +82

    Ancient India had several mentions of blue. Shiva is also called Neelakantha or the “blue throated one”. Similarly, another name for Vishnu is Nilesh, which simply means “the blue God”. Vishnu (and his avatars Ram and Krishna) are often depicted blue in colour.

    • @MeHungy136
      @MeHungy136 5 місяців тому +10

      There's a lot of scholarly debate about this. In the rig Veda, Neela is used to refer to everything from the ocean, to the back of a snake, to a peacock's neck to the night sky. It was initially probably used to describe something as dark, nightlike or ocean blue. Neelakantha could just have mean dark necked, not necessarily blue necked. Krishna and rama were also described as having neela complexion, but obviously they weren't blue.

    • @_sayandas
      @_sayandas 5 місяців тому +2

      He clearly said later that blue is mentioned but is the last to be mentioned compared to other colors

    • @michaelm1313
      @michaelm1313 4 місяці тому

      ​@@MeHungy136like aubergine?

    • @have_a_good_day420
      @have_a_good_day420 2 місяці тому

      Yes and in ancient Buddhist texts they describe the heart chakra as a deep blue light. They talked about blue in ancient Indian and Tibetan texts so maybe it was westerners who couldn't see Blue.

    • @Ylug_20
      @Ylug_20 2 місяці тому

      @@_sayandaswhat does that have to do with what the comment says? The Vedas and Purans are older than what the video mentions

  • @Ivehadenuff
    @Ivehadenuff 4 роки тому +4293

    This explains why having a large vocabulary makes a person have more precise thoughts.

    • @waitaminutewhoarrrrru
      @waitaminutewhoarrrrru 4 роки тому +142

      More precise, maybe.
      But more useful? Smarter? Better? That's another story.

    • @mermaidismyname
      @mermaidismyname 4 роки тому +383

      @@waitaminutewhoarrrrru eh considering the number of times in my brain I'm like "ya know what's the word for *gestures broadly* ya know that highly specific abstract concept that I cannot describe in anyway but have a perfect feeling of in my mind" I'm going to say that having esoteric vocabulary is sometimes useful to prevent you from going you know the thing with the thing and the other thing...

    • @waitaminutewhoarrrrru
      @waitaminutewhoarrrrru 4 роки тому +55

      @@mermaidismyname but would the THOUGHT you're having actually be more useful? ...No...Even more so, is it all that useful in communicating to have a large vocabulary with specific words for specific things? Probably only some times. I think people with smaller vocabularies often are far more poetic than people with large vocabularies. "Wine-dark sea" is more poetic than "blue sea," for example. And I often find myself wishing I could talk like people in the rural areas of the USA who are so creative in describing things extremely accurately and poetically using a small vocabulary of common words.

    • @sazcxieo
      @sazcxieo 4 роки тому +33

      Also explains why its easier to memorize numbers or dates or events because you associate that number with something for example 23;michael jordan.

    • @Azz-M
      @Azz-M 4 роки тому +4

      Me speaking arabic :

  • @vickylikesthis
    @vickylikesthis 4 роки тому +3206

    in indonesian, we call pink "young red"

    • @fatgirlballet
      @fatgirlballet 4 роки тому +343

      that's adorable

    • @AbiRizky
      @AbiRizky 4 роки тому +78

      Oh hello. Yeah that or, "guava red" lol

    • @gavinattalahadiyan325
      @gavinattalahadiyan325 4 роки тому +21

      Merah Muda~~~

    • @Mister_Clipster
      @Mister_Clipster 4 роки тому +84

      It's totally accurate if you really think about it.

    • @piranhaplantX
      @piranhaplantX 4 роки тому +102

      Honestly, pink is essentially just red's baby blue. Among the other named colors in English, pink is probably the most arbitrary one. It's just a range of red tints.

  • @fcv4616
    @fcv4616 3 роки тому +1190

    Ancient Greeks: “I’m feeling wine-dark today”.

    • @rockingamingwiththesahit2145
      @rockingamingwiththesahit2145 3 роки тому +4

      Lmfao

    • @anikaloves
      @anikaloves 3 роки тому +5

      drunk?

    • @rockingamingwiththesahit2145
      @rockingamingwiththesahit2145 3 роки тому +4

      @@anikaloves No, I’m feeling blue today

    • @paranorman6999
      @paranorman6999 3 роки тому +1

      Amandaishere.jpg
      Sweet Amanda, in the Lake
      Wonder how much She can take
      Cut Her finger, take her ring
      Bruise her up, black as sin
      Shoot Her down, blind her eye
      Bury Her in the night.
      See the arms, shake in fear
      Here She is, Amanda is here.
      A woman named Amanda married a therapist. A patient of this therapist was obsessed with him and jealous of Amanda, so She kidnapped her, took her to Sorren lake, in Cascada Mira Park, and tortured, blinded, shot and buried her, and also She stole her engagement ring after cutting off the finger. The cops found Amanda bc She tried to crawl out of her grave and died with only the arms sticking out of the mud. Since she didn't want to be forgotten, Amanda came back as an image. As a vengace, a photo of Amanda must be shared in order to avoid being killer or haunted by her.

    • @theodoranaku3403
      @theodoranaku3403 3 роки тому +1

      Με

  • @Patrick_Engels
    @Patrick_Engels 6 місяців тому +26

    When studying art, one of the first examples for this that is given is Brown and Yellow.
    They seem so different to us, but brown is just a very dark yellow (sometimes mixed with red)

    • @keithwellerlounge74
      @keithwellerlounge74 5 місяців тому

      If a banana was brown the Greeks would have noticed FFS.

    • @ROBOHOLIC1
      @ROBOHOLIC1 14 днів тому

      Bananas as we know them are a modern invention. Not a good example

  • @nathanm.8823
    @nathanm.8823 4 роки тому +4369

    I'm going to start describing my eye color as wine-dark.

  • @tammyclairs166
    @tammyclairs166 4 роки тому +848

    It’s like when you meet someone new in school and “suddenly u see them everywhere”

    • @sepkos9680
      @sepkos9680 4 роки тому +9

      Yeah I like that analogy

    • @SpinningSidekick
      @SpinningSidekick 4 роки тому +17

      Otherwise known as "stalking"

    • @Octopixel40
      @Octopixel40 4 роки тому +5

      when you learn a new word and start hearing it more often

    • @peter-jx3uc
      @peter-jx3uc 4 роки тому +6

      The Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon

  • @owenleech6569
    @owenleech6569 4 роки тому +2963

    "But blue? it was one of the hardest colors to create"
    Purple: hold my beer

    • @flakey-finn
      @flakey-finn 4 роки тому +85

      Purple? Blue? Arent that black?

    • @GoldenGrenadier
      @GoldenGrenadier 4 роки тому +149

      RIP snails.

    • @ThisIsNotAhnJieRen
      @ThisIsNotAhnJieRen 4 роки тому +35

      @@GoldenGrenadier Hahaha. Is there a country flag that has Purple?

    • @davincent98
      @davincent98 4 роки тому +5

      @@GoldenGrenadier don't forget the mollusks. Also the urine.

    • @jimezsmoots2172
      @jimezsmoots2172 4 роки тому +67

      @@ThisIsNotAhnJieRen no, due to purple being extremely hard to create, countries didn’t have the money to create them through dyes. Quick lesson here, basically too expensive and too time wasting to create for stuff that needed the flags. Such as army’s and shit

  • @saiz1235
    @saiz1235 9 місяців тому +23

    In the Sanskrit language from India, one of the oldest languages in the world predating the Christian era ,the word blue is mentioned as Nila. The Hindu god Shiv is sometimes referred to as Nilkantha. So the utterance of the word blue predates all other languages in the world.

    • @yueli92
      @yueli92 8 місяців тому

      Unless you have a way to travel back in time and interview people from all sorts of prehistoric cultures, this is just nationalistic nonsense. Most languages weren't written thousands of years ago.

    • @shawnsg
      @shawnsg 5 місяців тому

      That's not correct.

    • @SouravChalotra13
      @SouravChalotra13 5 місяців тому

      ​@@shawnsgbruh it's true, you don't know our culture more than us.lemme share some fact our Shiva idol which was found during the excavation of (Harappan sites)is much older than almost any other religion. I don't mean to be disrespectful to any religion,but it's a fact that Nila(blue) is mentioned in our scriptures.❤

    • @Amir-lq1fy
      @Amir-lq1fy 5 місяців тому

      Name the scripture ​@@SouravChalotra13

    • @SouravChalotra13
      @SouravChalotra13 5 місяців тому

      @@Amir-lq1fy rigved

  • @Baobabooo
    @Baobabooo 4 роки тому +2247

    In old Japanese, we call green “ao” meaning “blue”. We still call green signal “ao-shingo(signal)”. I always thought it was strange, but I guess we had way more words to describe colors back then.

    • @wolf12345
      @wolf12345 4 роки тому +51

      I’m also Japanese just cool that ur here

    • @Baobabooo
      @Baobabooo 4 роки тому +29

      @@wolf12345 heyyy what’s up!👋🏻

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 4 роки тому +6

      aozora ni naru song

    • @AsapSCIENCE
      @AsapSCIENCE  4 роки тому +178

      Very cool!

    • @Primalxbeast
      @Primalxbeast 4 роки тому +32

      But there's a kanji for green, so I guess that the Chinese had a word for green before the Japanese?

  • @user-kv8gf7zv9n
    @user-kv8gf7zv9n 4 роки тому +3953

    “Why the Greeks can’t see blue”:
    Greeks: Hey, you guys like the invisible flag?

    • @user-kv8gf7zv9n
      @user-kv8gf7zv9n 4 роки тому +127

      The joke is Greece’s flag is Blue. 🇬🇷

    • @user-kv8gf7zv9n
      @user-kv8gf7zv9n 4 роки тому +52

      @@october17leftyjason32 🤡 Take a joke

    • @flare8197
      @flare8197 4 роки тому +8

      @@october17leftyjason32 so white flag

    • @ΝίκηΧανδρή
      @ΝίκηΧανδρή 4 роки тому +54

      @Victor Mace in what all foreigners call Greece, a proud people called Ellines(eng. Hellene) live...and they call their country Ellada, or Ellas(eng. Hellas. Greece , Grecia, and Grecos are names from the days of Rome, which Romans used. We are the Hellenes and we still have the DNA to prove it despite conquests. Eat your heart out

    • @ΝίκηΧανδρή
      @ΝίκηΧανδρή 4 роки тому +34

      Modern day Turkey was once Ionia, and Byzantium , even there the population has a large proportion of its DNA from the Hellenes, you must realize that the natives simply coverted to Islam to preserve their property rights and avoid taxation.

  • @ROBYNMARKOW
    @ROBYNMARKOW 4 роки тому +1655

    On Wednesdays we wear a light form of red.

  • @_icscata_
    @_icscata_ 2 місяці тому +4

    Mad respect for the people who painted the sky blue.

    • @brainwaiver1
      @brainwaiver1 День тому

      The sky is blue, then black, sometimes red, then black, sometimes white, then black....

  • @ruqayahamad2393
    @ruqayahamad2393 4 роки тому +1137

    "the limits of my language mean the limits of my world"
    Ludwig Wittgenstein

    • @mwanikimwaniki6801
      @mwanikimwaniki6801 4 роки тому +5

      I use this a lot lmao

    • @jonasandelfinger4529
      @jonasandelfinger4529 4 роки тому

      Kluftinger ftw

    • @mrkanenas
      @mrkanenas 4 роки тому +11

      I had this realisation last night. Language is so powerful

    • @astraeusgodofthestars676
      @astraeusgodofthestars676 4 роки тому +6

      Time to learn a lot of languages.

    • @davidweihe6052
      @davidweihe6052 4 роки тому +3

      Wrongo, Wittenstein Fan. Sapir-Whorf has been disproven many times in many situations. There is just a subtle difference in classification speed. Russians would distinguish between navy blue (which is not sea blue, but designed by Navys to be distinguishable from sea blue) and sky blue slightly faster, because they have different words for them (much like the red/pink distinction pointed out in the video).

  • @phlave
    @phlave 4 роки тому +499

    When you learn a new word and start seing and hearing it everywhere it's a sign that you should clear your cookies in the Matrix.

  • @ale_________
    @ale_________ 4 роки тому +416

    I love how you are evolving your content so much! I know YT isn't built for this but please know that a lot of us appreciate it :)

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 2 місяці тому +1

    Just subscribed because of the video. I’m 80 years old, and love learning new stuff!

  • @sanahameed9832
    @sanahameed9832 4 роки тому +159

    You know it’s kind of like meeting new people. Before you meet them they blend in with the crowd, but after meeting them, they start popping up in the hallway all the time

    • @thedevil9442
      @thedevil9442 4 роки тому +4

      they still blend in with the crowd for me.

  • @patrikcath1025
    @patrikcath1025 4 роки тому +496

    **learns to identify every hex RGB code**
    *Mortals, I can see through your camouflage*

    • @lexecomplexe4083
      @lexecomplexe4083 4 роки тому +10

      Until you learn you can no longer see magenta because it isn't real 😓

    • @hridyanadappattel4400
      @hridyanadappattel4400 4 роки тому +2

      Unless you come across animals like mantis shrimp

    • @4n0ngaming
      @4n0ngaming 4 роки тому

      @@lexecomplexe4083 magenta has a hex code

    • @lexecomplexe4083
      @lexecomplexe4083 4 роки тому +1

      @@4n0ngaming Magenta isn't an actual color though. Its literally red and violet light alternating at a speed high enough that your brain interprets it as a new color. One that doesn't exist in the physical world. Magenta is quite literally an illusion

  • @blackhawks81H
    @blackhawks81H 4 роки тому +946

    Cyan, is blue. "Its name is derived from the Ancient Greek κύανος, transliterated kyanos, meaning dark blue, dark blue enamel, Lapis lazuli"

    • @billkeithchannel
      @billkeithchannel 4 роки тому +50

      But yet in modern times cyan is a light blue.

    • @JTNashville
      @JTNashville 4 роки тому +55

      Kinda puts the kibosh on this whole video. Nice one.

    • @alexanderhenby1362
      @alexanderhenby1362 4 роки тому +35

      Except that isn't exactly true either. Entomologicaly speaking the word κύανος "According to Beekes, probably from Hittite (kuwannan-, “precious stone, copper, blue”), likely from Proto-Indo-European *ḱwey- (“to shine, white, light”) (compare *ḱweytós (“white”)" It was likely used previously to describe the oxidation of copper which anyone who has been to New York can tell you, isn't blue.

    • @charimuvilla8693
      @charimuvilla8693 4 роки тому +91

      @@alexanderhenby1362 In ancient greek it is very clear "κυανος" means blue. Telling you this as someone who has studied ancient greek. This video is painful to watch lol.

    • @cherylmcginnis7696
      @cherylmcginnis7696 4 роки тому +28

      @@alexanderhenby1362 The medical term for someone turning blue due to lack of oxygen is cyanotic.

  • @st.altair4936
    @st.altair4936 2 місяці тому +3

    I never even considered that language could affect our visual senses like that, and to _that_ extent. That's so cool!

  • @unlimitedgnar1955
    @unlimitedgnar1955 4 роки тому +301

    When I got a new car, I suddenly started noticing that everyone had my car model verses before I never even noticed that the model existed

    • @MerxadMehr
      @MerxadMehr 4 роки тому +7

      Selection bias

    • @trudycolborne2371
      @trudycolborne2371 4 роки тому +8

      My registration says my car is gray when it's clearly a light golden yellow. Now I notice every car with the same paint colour. The parking lot search has trained us.

    • @untitled2792
      @untitled2792 4 роки тому +1

      @@trudycolborne2371 were they colorblind?

    • @SkyManBGProductions
      @SkyManBGProductions 4 роки тому

      I bought a fanny pack and suddenly everyone in my town started having one out of nowhere 😂😂

    • @justinbolsen3053
      @justinbolsen3053 4 роки тому

      dunning krueger effect

  • @jacobkrueger1022
    @jacobkrueger1022 3 роки тому +1092

    That feedback loop is also responsible for the weird feeling of when you get a new car, then all the sudden you see people driving the same car as you everywhere.

    • @ateshhastam
      @ateshhastam 3 роки тому +47

      Baader -Meinhof phenomenon aka “frequency illusion.”

    • @icarusbinns3156
      @icarusbinns3156 3 роки тому +7

      And yet! I’m hearing my name a heck of a lot more now than just two years ago. That’s the bizarre thing to me

    • @majesticpbjcat7707
      @majesticpbjcat7707 3 роки тому +15

      Like how I remember as a kid in the 80's and 90's always reading and hearing the phrase "all of a sudden" yet now I read and hear many people saying "all the sudden." Doesn't sound right to me though.

    • @bloblovlalalulu3422
      @bloblovlalalulu3422 3 роки тому +5

      Same with buying a shirt or dress. Suddenly everyone around has the same thing dammit!

    • @Dana-ki6vs
      @Dana-ki6vs 3 роки тому +5

      @@bloblovlalalulu3422 probably because you are caught up with the trends and buy stuff at the right time 😂

  • @Miguel-cn5lu
    @Miguel-cn5lu 4 роки тому +3022

    I mean they weren’t wrong calling the sky “black” because it is technically black at night

    • @iakovos56
      @iakovos56 4 роки тому +36

      You have black photo

    • @xerotolerant
      @xerotolerant 4 роки тому +62

      Lol. The sky is still ‘blue’ at night. Stealth jets have lights along their surface to match the blue of the sky at night. Otherwise they would just appear to be giant black objects against the blue background.

    • @nikifora.738
      @nikifora.738 4 роки тому +3

      @@iakovos56 his photo is blue

    • @iAMJaws
      @iAMJaws 4 роки тому +11

      @@xerotolerant in actuality the sky is not blue. It's colourless by itself but due to external factors it changes.

    • @MojaKann
      @MojaKann 4 роки тому

      technically 😂

  • @perkoz9364
    @perkoz9364 5 місяців тому +10

    Im not sure but it could be that “blue” wasn’t mention because they didn’t know English at that time

  • @ad5048
    @ad5048 4 роки тому +1259

    *The year is 3100*
    OurTube: Why Ancient Europeans Couldn't See Blurple

    • @vellivampire
      @vellivampire 4 роки тому +89

      😂😂😂 i don't understand man clearly they were colourblind. They didn't even knew Rorange and Pellow🤷

    • @user-eb5gd4gm2w
      @user-eb5gd4gm2w 4 роки тому +64

      "Ourtube" 😂😂

    • @adityabarettaputra6786
      @adityabarettaputra6786 4 роки тому +26

      How about Blite?

    • @Pokemaster-wg9gx
      @Pokemaster-wg9gx 4 роки тому +21

      The funniest part is the Discord logo color is literally called Blurple

    • @mlokgerm
      @mlokgerm 4 роки тому +16

      Are you trying to say that communism took over

  • @Hellercor
    @Hellercor 3 роки тому +2282

    They actually had word(s) for blue. Kyanos (Cyan - deep or sea blue) and Glaukos (light blue), Kyanoglaukos (something between cyan and light blue), Galanos (the colour of the calm sea), Kal(l)ais (turquoise), Porphyra (purple blue). These are all from Ancient Greek mind you. Modern Greek has those as well as compounds of those. And of course ble (blue thanks to French being the previous lingua franca)... So "Wine dark sea" is used as a poetic license in guess what(!): Homeric Epic poems...Very descriptive as a phrase of the Aegean sea colour just after sunset, or during a storm...

    • @doriangel97
      @doriangel97 3 роки тому +445

      How is this comment more well researched than the videofnfk

    • @BionAvastar3000
      @BionAvastar3000 3 роки тому +72

      Yeah, that's what I was thinking!

    • @jessebianchi2631
      @jessebianchi2631 3 роки тому +188

      Odd how scanning comments can save time.

    • @JonathanLidbeck
      @JonathanLidbeck 3 роки тому +192

      "The original hebrew Bible.. fails to mention blue once" Esther 1:6 "The garden had hangings of white and blue [כָּחוֹל] linen" 8:15 "Mordecai went out from the presence of the king in royal apparel of blue and white"

    • @danny-taenzer
      @danny-taenzer 3 роки тому +36

      Thank heavens for this intelligent Reply from Hellecor!! "ECHFARISTO!!!!" ♡♡

  • @customsongmaker
    @customsongmaker 4 роки тому +1935

    "Why Homer couldn't see blue" - he was blind

    • @ferocient
      @ferocient 4 роки тому +32

      God, I love this comment! ;-)

    • @silviusforosiculensis
      @silviusforosiculensis 4 роки тому +18

      Or maybe because you can't see colours if you don't exist.

    • @customsongmaker
      @customsongmaker 4 роки тому +77

      @@silviusforosiculensis - The Odyssey exists. Therefore, someone wrote it. We refer to that person as Homer.

    • @bernard7057
      @bernard7057 4 роки тому +27

      @@customsongmaker but we also refer to the people who wrote different poems as homer. So wouldnt homer, at this point, be more lile a job title

    • @customsongmaker
      @customsongmaker 4 роки тому +40

      @@bernard7057 - I try not to refer to different people as the same person. Have you considered the possibility that Homer wrote different poems?

  • @soldier1939
    @soldier1939 2 місяці тому +1

    Better title: Why Greek had no mention of blue as a color

  • @epi2045
    @epi2045 4 роки тому +566

    In the Vietnamese language, green and blue are “Xanh” (pronounced “sun”). They are distinguished as Xanh Troi (troi means sky) as Blue and Xanh La (La means leaf) as Green.

    • @quicksilver0294
      @quicksilver0294 4 роки тому +16

      Woah that’s a really beautiful way to think about it 😯 thanks for sharing

    • @johannarivers57
      @johannarivers57 4 роки тому +4

      Does Xanh mean anything on it's own or does it always need to be followed by la or troi? Either way, how cool

    • @uonghan3489
      @uonghan3489 4 роки тому +10

      xanh on its own can mean either blue or green

    • @pianovsviolon
      @pianovsviolon 4 роки тому +6

      Vietnamese actually have words only for Blue and Green which are "xanh lục" or "lục" for Blue and "xanh lam" or "lam" for Green. We have words for different shades of colors that comes from objects around us such as "xanh lá" for Green from leaf, "xanh lá mạ" for Lime cause "lá mạ" is the seedling leaves (in this case is the seedling leaves of rice plant, "xanh da trời" or "xanh nước biển" for Blue from "da trời" for "sky skin" or "nước biển" for "ocean water"

    • @mangalad4565
      @mangalad4565 4 роки тому +2

      Not sure if it’s just my family, but for us we usually use xanh as blue and xanh lá cây for green. I’m surprised how many ways to say blue and green there are though! The more you know.

  • @inkling1347
    @inkling1347 4 роки тому +392

    As a linguist, I think you did a great job of explaining this! It's so cool to think about the ways language can influence our perception of the world.

    • @isaacbruce6652
      @isaacbruce6652 4 роки тому +5

      ANGEL FELIPE ALVARADO CHAVARIN As well as cardinal direction! Some languages don’t have words for left, right, etc., but use absolute direction based on the cardinal directions (north, east, south, and west); people who speak these languages can have an innate sense of cardinal directions because it’s necessarily in order to communicate. Imagine being able to intrinsically know which way is north at any given time!

    • @danieldonaldson744
      @danieldonaldson744 4 роки тому +2

      As a former color theory professor I really focused on that. I was able to teach, see, and use color well enough to do that job but it was only possible because I spent a long time learning about pigments selling art supplies when I was younger. The biggest “2001 monolith moment” was when I learned about how additive color works and is organized on a different wheel than were taught as kids. In the end the only way I could know something was to have a word for it and then from there I could see it.

    • @ajcruzer92
      @ajcruzer92 4 роки тому

      Agreed

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie 4 роки тому +2

      Except that he was wrong about icelandic texts as blue is mentioned as both ravens and water are blue.

    • @uMaud
      @uMaud 4 роки тому

      So that is why I only realised around the age of 10 that pink is actually a lighter shade of red 😅

  • @Silvermage447
    @Silvermage447 4 роки тому +1505

    Title: Why the Ancient Greeks Couldn’t See Blue
    First minute: OK so they could see blue but they didn’t have a word for it

    • @fap9067
      @fap9067 4 роки тому +151

      yeah, click bait on a science channel...

    • @robloxaccountant7086
      @robloxaccountant7086 4 роки тому +64

      Thank you for voicing my annoyance with the title. I am distraught ;_;

    • @My_eyesburn
      @My_eyesburn 4 роки тому +45

      Thanks for saving me 7 minutes

    • @My_eyesburn
      @My_eyesburn 4 роки тому +31

      @Angry Hippo you must be fun at parties

    • @444haluk
      @444haluk 4 роки тому +14

      they had a word for it: black. blue was a shade of black and it was the number one color, not the last one. The sky was always black, just with different shades of black (hence different shades of blue).

  • @crewrangergaming9582
    @crewrangergaming9582 15 днів тому +1

    I don't even have to go as far back as greek ancient history.
    My mom, who lived in a villagd in the 70-80s in India, never had formal education, always refered to anything blue as "Hariyar" which is Hindi word for Green, I always used to correct her and argue with her that she is wrong, it is not green, it is blue "Neela" in Hindi. That means many of the village people even today refers to blue color as green. That's so strange.
    Interestingly, I have heard them use to refer to sky's color as just "asmaani rang" which literally mean sky color.

  • @navytav
    @navytav 4 роки тому +507

    Somali doesn't have a word for "purple." All my friends would say it was either a dark blue or sometime a dark pink.

    • @ishmaelm1932
      @ishmaelm1932 4 роки тому +1

      Warya beenta jooji. purple is "barbal"
      Lmfaoooo

    • @navytav
      @navytav 4 роки тому +1

      @@ishmaelm1932 Macalimiintayda u sheeg!

    • @IronNidow
      @IronNidow 4 роки тому +15

      In Portuguese we have 2 words of purple: Roxo( closer to Blue), and Lilás (closer to Red)

    • @bradleyvrooman1801
      @bradleyvrooman1801 4 роки тому +15

      I can't even see purple lol. It's just dark blue to me. I also can't see green, it's just a brown or orange. Art class was fun when I was a kid.

    • @gaybeansprout
      @gaybeansprout 4 роки тому

      Purple doesn't even exist ._.

  • @Revolta666
    @Revolta666 4 роки тому +2309

    This is true. That's why they are called 'red' onion, when they are clearly purple. There didn't used to be a word for purple.

    • @madisworld9470
      @madisworld9470 4 роки тому +40

      that’s wild

    • @Sharish747
      @Sharish747 4 роки тому +8

      I coloblinding

    • @Sharish747
      @Sharish747 4 роки тому +2

      Jost codding

    • @dnhn.design
      @dnhn.design 4 роки тому +2

      Colorblind:

    • @elijahmikhail4566
      @elijahmikhail4566 4 роки тому +95

      I’m a native Tagalog speaker. In addition to purple onions being called red, brown sugar is called red sugar, and eggs have a white part and a red part. Most people grow up using English nowadays though, so most people are primed for distinguishing between red, orange and brown. We just use red in those archaic contexts cause those are everyday objects that I guess people didn’t see the point of renaming.

  • @BriggsWare
    @BriggsWare 4 роки тому +549

    Imagine in the future where other people are surprised we can not see Humulkus

    • @Roseviell
      @Roseviell 4 роки тому +11

      What is it.

    • @alecity4877
      @alecity4877 4 роки тому +55

      @@Roseviell a colour between red and green

    • @psyducktective
      @psyducktective 4 роки тому +32

      And octarine

    • @trudycolborne2371
      @trudycolborne2371 4 роки тому +4

      This explains a great deal about my son's Among Us videos complaining about cyan.

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 4 роки тому +1

      Wait y'all can't see humulkus?

  • @rascalap2968
    @rascalap2968 6 місяців тому +3

    Great presenting: enthusiasm without sounding patronising. A rare skill…

  • @deltacat27
    @deltacat27 3 роки тому +849

    People in 2000 years: Why The Ancient Earthlings Couldn't See Ultraviolet

    • @Demogorgon47
      @Demogorgon47 3 роки тому +20

      People in 20000 years, Why Ancient Earthlings couldn't see colours in 5 dimensions.

    • @williamjones4164
      @williamjones4164 3 роки тому +6

      @Judith Mirville You cannot actually observe true ultraviolet light. It isn’t possible for humans; although, we can observe the effects UV light can have on certain substances and the violet visible light usually emitted along with the UV light (e.g. torches usually operate by emitting a small range of wavelengths so there can be overlaps between UV and the short wavelength visible light which is violet in colour hence both are present).

    • @CaptainSlapaDome
      @CaptainSlapaDome 3 роки тому +1

      @@williamjones4164 yup. On the same token, I read a study some years back (2009 - 2011) about a birth "defect" that comes to women from their fathers side, somehow granting them true 3d vision, or the ability to see the whole color spectrum. It was estimated that the numbers of women with this defect, worldwide, measure in the low thousands. I wonder how things would look from those eyes.

    • @andrerobatino6298
      @andrerobatino6298 3 роки тому

      @@williamjones4164 People with a condition called aphakia (a missing lens in the eye, most often caused by cataract surgery) can see ultraviolet to about 300 nm (the range for normal visible light is about 380 to 720 nm). The lens normally blocks it.

    • @suhailab3634
      @suhailab3634 3 роки тому

      @@williamjones4164 you can see ultraviolet, it depends on the wavelenth, like humans can barely see 380nm-400nm ultraviolet but that's all

  • @KS-sj8nb
    @KS-sj8nb 3 роки тому +198

    It's like the Eskimo/Inuit having no word for 'snow', but lots of words for different kinds of snow.

    • @arkrules8557
      @arkrules8557 3 роки тому

      No... there was "cyan" meaning blue in ancient Greek. And many others covering basic colours and shades

    • @arkrules8557
      @arkrules8557 3 роки тому

      Not only in Ancient Greek in Koine but in Modern Greek too. Some say κυανόλευκη (cyan-white) Greece's flag instead of blé (blue)

    • @Polyglot_English
      @Polyglot_English 3 роки тому

      Детерминизм это Свобода 🤙

  • @shaded3293
    @shaded3293 4 роки тому +892

    This could explain why artists can see color very well, and give each one a name.

    • @justaname6011
      @justaname6011 4 роки тому +58

      Trained their brains maybe, from interacting on a daily basis with the need to know this

    • @hairglowingkyle4572
      @hairglowingkyle4572 4 роки тому +82

      Depends on the artist, I can't remember the names but I'm like "Ah yes this pinkish darkish reddish yellowish but a little but of violet color"

    • @rjvasquez3464
      @rjvasquez3464 4 роки тому +51

      @@hairglowingkyle4572 definitely this. i can see small differences like which is warmer or cooler but I don't think i can name colors accurately

    • @randomuser3988
      @randomuser3988 4 роки тому +44

      Also why people who are music nerds can differentiate between genres, but my mom says "what is this metal junk?" every time she hears an electric guitar 😂

    • @matandana110
      @matandana110 4 роки тому +2

      @@hairglowingkyle4572 this is me I think the brown that has a tint of sap green

  • @pablocopello3592
    @pablocopello3592 2 місяці тому +1

    There are lots of colors that we can see, but that we cannot remember long enough (as to form part of our long-term consciousness): that is, if we do not have a "name" for a color, we cannot remember it for more than a few moments (after those moments, we not only forget the "sensation" of the color itself, but we almost always also forget that we had a "sensation"). The above is known thru the study of well defined patterns in the visual cortex associated with seeing different colors: some patterns correspond to "named" colors and other correspond to colors not associated with a name (a "name" correspond to a conceptualized idea). Some of those colors (identified by activity patterns in the visual cortex), like "charm", "leyu" and "uma" can be identified as beyond violet (but not ultraviolet) because of the shape of the associated neuron activity patterns being more intricate than violet (that is more intricate than blue, etc.). Other colors are "anti" colors, meaning that correspond to the patterns that assumes the visual cortex immediately after seeing a color for a certain time (for instance, if you see an intense green light for a few seconds, when that green light disappears (leaving total darkness), you see anti-green for a fraction of a second). Finally there are "contrast" colors, that are colors seen only as a "contrast" with respect to other surrounding colors (like brown: have you seen brown light in an otherwise perfectly dark room ??), new identified contrast colors (by the neural activity patterns of the visual cortex) are "brarm", "breyu" etc.
    Clue: do not believe (or discard) anything without a serious study and logical analysis.

  • @craigbell8373
    @craigbell8373 4 роки тому +402

    Me in class: this is boring
    Me in my free time: Hmm yes the sky is blue

    • @needlessoptions
      @needlessoptions 4 роки тому +12

      Most teachers are not very entertaining, plus if you're forced to be there you're not gonna be as enthused anyway.

    • @paytondelaney8316
      @paytondelaney8316 4 роки тому +1

      @@needlessoptions preach it!

    • @aneanderthalscout37
      @aneanderthalscout37 4 роки тому +1

      @@needlessoptions facts and this is why a lot of people benefit much more from educational UA-cam videos that entertain you while stale schoolwork doesn’t

  • @HBStone
    @HBStone 3 роки тому +2911

    "Blue is the final color to enter the language in every single culture." That's it guys, we got blue, time to wrap up the whole color naming project.

    • @calebbyers
      @calebbyers 3 роки тому +15

      Way underrated.

    • @88cameras
      @88cameras 3 роки тому +68

      Crayola never got the memo.

    • @myvideosetc.8271
      @myvideosetc.8271 3 роки тому +30

      Not in japanese, even in the 1800-900 they dis not have "green"

    • @willbray__
      @willbray__ 3 роки тому +4

      Bloo

    • @dannyrudderham5122
      @dannyrudderham5122 3 роки тому +20

      Blue is definetly my favorite flavour. Blue tastes better than any other colour.

  • @ENLSLive
    @ENLSLive 3 роки тому +2375

    Everyone: Why did the ancient greeks not say the word "blue"?
    Me: Well probably because they didn't speak english idk

    • @defectivepikachu4582
      @defectivepikachu4582 3 роки тому +25

      some of them were pretty smart tho you never know

    • @andik70
      @andik70 3 роки тому +53

      @@defectivepikachu4582 hahaha. Well, there was no english at that time, isnt it.

    • @Atariese
      @Atariese 3 роки тому +28

      To be fair: "Its all Greek to me" - Shakespeare

    • @bunja9101
      @bunja9101 3 роки тому +21

      @@defectivepikachu4582 the English language didn't even exist yet you donut

    • @miguelthealpaca8971
      @miguelthealpaca8971 3 роки тому +9

      @@bunja9101 hey, don't be so hard on him/her. He/she is a defective Pikachu, afterall.

  • @viper2148
    @viper2148 2 місяці тому +2

    'Ancient Greeks Couldn't See Blue DEBUNKED Once and For All' metatron

  • @oldchannelnewoneisinaboutp3726
    @oldchannelnewoneisinaboutp3726 4 роки тому +1062

    greek: "looks up the sky"
    the sky: [REDACTED]

  • @TheRedEncryption
    @TheRedEncryption 4 роки тому +1924

    just make a word for every color possible and *_T R A N S C E N D_*

    • @toldfable
      @toldfable 4 роки тому +41

      RGB or CMYK

    • @HaroldoPinheiro-OK
      @HaroldoPinheiro-OK 4 роки тому +36

      All the ten million?

    • @TheRedEncryption
      @TheRedEncryption 4 роки тому +32

      @@HaroldoPinheiro-OK Yes

    • @benny4798
      @benny4798 4 роки тому +54

      @@TheRedEncryption what about a word for every sound, smell, feel, touch and taste as well? You can’t truly transcend without doing it for all your senses.

    • @extragroovy735
      @extragroovy735 4 роки тому +36

      Literally every makeup brand

  • @crowsquared
    @crowsquared 3 роки тому +262

    This is every beginner fanfic writer trying to describe blue eyes without using the word blue

    • @rossanderson4440
      @rossanderson4440 3 роки тому +9

      (Blackadder): "So what you're saying is, is that something you've never seen is slightly bluer than something else you've never seen."

    • @njb1126
      @njb1126 3 роки тому +5

      Ah yes the desperate attempt by young adult novelists (a term I’m using loosely here) to stand out more
      ...her eyes were a deep shade, a dazzling hue comparable to cloudless sky or the Adriatic Sea...

  • @johnbrubaker2033
    @johnbrubaker2033 7 місяців тому +5

    I wonder how many ancient Greeks were interviewed before making this video.

  • @Arkylie
    @Arkylie 3 роки тому +1018

    One Minute In: "We figured maybe all Greeks were colorblind, but that's silly.
    Me: Have we considered the theory that *Homer* was colorblind?

    • @gamergamer1296
      @gamergamer1296 3 роки тому +92

      Homer was actually blind 😑

    • @iluvchess14736
      @iluvchess14736 3 роки тому +69

      Homer is believed to be blind because if there's a bard, its always blind when he writes about it
      Homer was a bard

    • @hyrekandragon2665
      @hyrekandragon2665 3 роки тому +35

      Well in those times if you were blind being a bard was one of the very few jobs you could have. So it's not too uncommon to see blind bards

    • @jackb4691
      @jackb4691 3 роки тому +148

      In one episode Homer makes a reference to Marge's blue hair, so no.

    • @EleneDOM
      @EleneDOM 3 роки тому +22

      @@jackb4691 Best comment here today!

  • @WestonNey
    @WestonNey 4 роки тому +1137

    “Blue is the hardest color to make.” Then how did that bully turn my face black and blue so easily?

    • @PredatorH2O
      @PredatorH2O 4 роки тому +37

      Well I bet it didn't feel very easy to you.

    • @marijuanaknowsomething6743
      @marijuanaknowsomething6743 4 роки тому +19

      Because black was present.
      Now if he made your face straight up blue then that would be impressive. Lol

    • @looka698
      @looka698 4 роки тому +6

      You mean he gave you blue eye? Or did he give you black eye 🤔?

    • @rusyaidiamir7445
      @rusyaidiamir7445 4 роки тому +1

      Alec benjamin fan will understand

    • @anutpalgogoi9741
      @anutpalgogoi9741 4 роки тому +2

      There there

  • @JonJon4351
    @JonJon4351 3 роки тому +876

    Basically an example of this today would be how cyan and indigo are both "blue" despite being very different. Like I feel like red and orange are more alike than cyan and indigo.

    • @electroflames
      @electroflames 3 роки тому +89

      @@banhammer3904 pretty sure there is no such thing as a fake color, what are you talking about

    • @elrvengador
      @elrvengador 3 роки тому +9

      Brown is not a real color is just dark orange

    • @reddytoplay9188
      @reddytoplay9188 3 роки тому +8

      @@electroflames I think this was a joke about ancient people.

    • @iankearns774
      @iankearns774 3 роки тому +42

      @@banhammer3904 As a qualified printer of over 30 years I dispute that, most of my working life I have dealt with the four colour process, cyan, magenta, yellow and black (keyline) and all the colours when combined that they can make. Indigo is obviously between blue and violet on the rainbow spectrum but nowhere near black as a colour.Indigo used to be called bronze blue as an ink but these days as a spot colour is sort of like a reflex blue. You may need to get checked for colour blindness if you think your statement is factual.

    • @desanctisapostata
      @desanctisapostata 3 роки тому +8

      @@iankearns774 Also people always forget that it depends on the color spectrum or theory we are talking about, wether it's substractive or additive

  • @facuzamorano7839
    @facuzamorano7839 Місяць тому +1

    In spanish we actualy have a word for "sky blue" and we call it "celeste"

  • @nate.5642
    @nate.5642 3 роки тому +1032

    Ancient Greek People: *look at the sky*
    The Sky: *PNG Checkerboard*

  • @shreyashrout6563
    @shreyashrout6563 3 роки тому +838

    Can we just appreciate the person who had to read through all the text to find out there wasn’t the word blue in it

    • @dimitrarena5643
      @dimitrarena5643 3 роки тому +59

      Well.... No. Cause apparently they refer to one text. There is tons of evidence of the word blue in Greek texts and as I read in the comments, in Indian as well. This is misinformation

    • @pixelatedcherry
      @pixelatedcherry 3 роки тому +15

      dude, i had to read it in school. it’s not that hard.

    • @marta1999smile2
      @marta1999smile2 3 роки тому +19

      bruh, these books are around 300 pages long. its genuinly not that hard to read through them😂

    • @xtaylorxboyx
      @xtaylorxboyx 3 роки тому +1

      @@pixelatedcherry what’s the name of the book you had to read for school?

    • @KP-we9ce
      @KP-we9ce 3 роки тому +7

      Ever heard of data processing?

  • @AstonishingStudios
    @AstonishingStudios 4 роки тому +2258

    You almost look like Mark Rober in the thumbnail

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 4 роки тому +15

      Mark Robber is much more smooth and smarter... No offense intended.

    • @AFrogInTheStars
      @AFrogInTheStars 4 роки тому +9

      Ohhhh, *that’s* who he reminded me of!

    • @jaryno4774
      @jaryno4774 4 роки тому +6

      I thought he was Mark Rober in the thumbnail lol

    • @JacobRy
      @JacobRy 4 роки тому +6

      @@erikziak1249 ...

    • @TheSlicingSword
      @TheSlicingSword 4 роки тому +5

      Thats why I clicked hahaha

  • @jacobomariatrabadasanchezd5718
    @jacobomariatrabadasanchezd5718 5 місяців тому +1

    In this regard, I belive argentinians see 'celeste' 🩵 (sky-blue / pale blue - not a perfect translation in English) as a different colour from blue 💙 . It's the same effect you have described with red and pink.
    It's very interesting because I'm from Spain - we share language - but for a spaniard it's just a subtype of blue. For them it's like me saying red and pink are the same colour. I believe it is due to that coulour being more important in their culture (they have the Celeste in their flag 🇦🇷)

  • @JDsVarietyChannel
    @JDsVarietyChannel 4 роки тому +2728

    So this explains why after you buy a new car, you realize almost everyone on the road has the same one as you, and you no longer feel special. :-(

    • @ladyduchezz4239
      @ladyduchezz4239 4 роки тому +9

      I'm a fan since the start cus I was dumb

    • @curious5218
      @curious5218 4 роки тому +2

      Nice catch!

    • @anujarora0
      @anujarora0 4 роки тому +35

      It's called Baader- Meinhof Phenomenon

    • @Fiction_Supreme
      @Fiction_Supreme 4 роки тому +8

      If you buy the base model then yeah you're going to see it everywhere.

    • @DZ477
      @DZ477 4 роки тому +45

      Same here, I bought an expensive and rare car called the Toyota Corolla, but then I started noticing that car everywhere.

  • @mbe67
    @mbe67 3 роки тому +4082

    As someone who studied linguistics, I’d like to point out that even if Greeks did not have a word for blue (which is debatable), linguistic determinism (i.e: the theory that if a language lacks a word for a concept, then language users cannot comprehend or articulate the concept) has been disproven. There are plenty of existing languages that do not have words for certain colours, but users are able to differentiate between the colours anyway. So if anyone’s argument for the Ancient Greek not seeing blue is because they didn’t have a word, it’s just not that simple.
    Language does however affect the way we think (this is called linguistic relativity and it is fascinating, let me tell you) and the latter case described in the video is much more likely- there wasn’t a common word for blue (still debatable!), so people would be less adept at articulating and recognising the colour, because it simply doesn’t have a nice category for the brain to fit the concept into. Like trying to describe teal, or decide if teal looks more like green or blue if you don’t have the word ‘teal’ in your lexicon. So yeah, this comment is just to clarify things for anyone who thinks the Greeks were walking around colourblind to blue. I also love how everyone is suddenly horny for linguistics in the comments, although I feel the need to point out all these theories (linguistic relativity and linguistic determinism) are not new at all, but I’m glad they’re garnering some mainstream interest.

    • @MirwenAnareth
      @MirwenAnareth 3 роки тому +133

      I don't think this video suggests linguistic determinism though. I would rather say that it hints that language and abstract thinking go "hand in hand". I mean, the existence of language alone disproves linguistic determinism, because if people couldn't understand concepts without words, they couldn't assign words to the concepts that were new to them. :D Logic is all you need to figure this one out, there doesn't need to be a research for it. But the point of this video was that the perception of blue has changed over time. While back then, it was considered a shade of another color, nowadays it is standalone and we already distinguish shades of blue because "someone" has realized that blue could be an actual color. For sure this particular case is mostly wordplays and semantics, but it's still interesting to analyze. Perception matters a lot.

    • @camiloaa
      @camiloaa 3 роки тому +41

      Great explanation! I have always been annoyed by the fact that people can imagine that someone becomes colorblind just because they don't have a word for the color. But it annoys me even more that the standard answer is "linguistic determinism had been proven false, you are wrong," when the actual answer is much more interesting. Ancient Greek wouldn't think the sky, the ocean and butterflies were the same color, while they would think the ocean and wine were the same color. Could ancient Greek see blue? Yes, but didn't recognize it like you and me, and the reason is language.

    • @mbe67
      @mbe67 3 роки тому +45

      @@MirwenAnareth You’re right, of course. I was just worried about any misconceptions anyone might have, especially considering how the title might be a little misleading depending on someone’s interpretation. Also I’ve seen too many people on the internet unfortunately using similar evidence as presented in the video (Homer’s literature etc.) to justify the people of Ancient Greece being colourblind to blue and it probably mentally scarred me haha

    • @MirwenAnareth
      @MirwenAnareth 3 роки тому +24

      @@mbe67 Lol, okay, point taken. Well, the internet is full of rather illogical conclusions. A bit scary sometimes to see what's inside the heads of all those people you meet out in the streets.

    • @Cola-42
      @Cola-42 3 роки тому +13

      Don't worry guys, most people on the internet don't think about Ancient Greek at all.

  • @pawel-_-
    @pawel-_- 4 роки тому +177

    Fun fact: blue was so rare, that lapis lazuli - now considered to be semi-precious stone - was once more important then gold. Lapis also often was depicted as magical and thanks to that we can see it having magical abilities in games like Minecraft and other media.

    • @prakharmishra3000
      @prakharmishra3000 4 роки тому +8

      That's a real stone? Never knew

    • @BeingBhumika
      @BeingBhumika 4 роки тому +3

      @@prakharmishra3000 Yeah it is! We study about it in history

    • @TheKarret
      @TheKarret 4 роки тому +2

      @@prakharmishra3000 I bought a soap that had a lapis lazuli stone on it!

    • @prakharmishra3000
      @prakharmishra3000 4 роки тому +2

      @@TheKarret I wonder if your skin is fine :P

    • @Sumunuhriginal
      @Sumunuhriginal 4 роки тому +1

      @@prakharmishra3000 it’s what they use to make blue oil paint actually.

  • @jeetmakadiya23
    @jeetmakadiya23 6 місяців тому +3

    Bruh, ancient Indian text mentioned blue so many times. Blue in sanskrit language is called "neel". And its mentioned bunch of times in the ved,puran, upnishad and other many strotas. Hindu gods like Vishnu, krishn, shiv, bhairav, varun are depicted as blue. One of the name of shiv is "neelkanth" which means who have blue throat. I don't know where did you done your research from but I suggest you to research from the original texts and not from western translated bs. Hope that helps😉

  • @kanyekubrick5391
    @kanyekubrick5391 4 роки тому +909

    That makes sense why, in the Odyssey, they kept describing Athena’s eyes as “foamy, ocean.. *grey* “

    • @xl000
      @xl000 4 роки тому +64

      ocean gets its color from the sky... so if the weather is meh.... the water will look accordingly

    • @aserta
      @aserta 4 роки тому +18

      It's ok. Not like we mention to you, young pups, that we used to have to spend hours to boil eggs just right to get balls for our computer mice.

    • @saracole7623
      @saracole7623 4 роки тому +22

      That’s why they describe her eyes as grey!!! She actually had blue eyes! Oh my hackers!

    • @twystedhumour
      @twystedhumour 4 роки тому +3

      @@aserta that's fast. i used to wait for quail to lay eggs to get one for mine, and then i boil it.

    • @daerdevvyl4314
      @daerdevvyl4314 4 роки тому +10

      If your eyes are foamy, see a doctor.

  • @Theo-lf5yp
    @Theo-lf5yp 4 роки тому +1211

    Ancient Greeks actually had at least TWO words for Blue: "Cyanó" which is the Navy and "Galanó" which is the Light Blue.

    • @xaralamposkarapaulos5225
      @xaralamposkarapaulos5225 4 роки тому +159

      So this video is lying. I know it because I know Greek and Ancient Greek as well! You are right my brother
      Ps: Brother comes from Greek φράτηρ ;)

    • @nine300
      @nine300 4 роки тому +45

      This distinction is not uncommon, off the top of my head I can remember Swahili and Japanese having different words for "blue" and "sky blue," and I'm sure there are a few others (Edit) Russian

    • @len8361
      @len8361 4 роки тому +42

      Yeah true im Greek myself and i know ancient greek and ive studied Odysee and Iliada too

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 4 роки тому +18

      Rev. 9:17 εχοντας θωρακας πυρινους και υακινθινους και θειωδεις... okay, it's named for a flower, but it is yet another word for blue. And there are two words for red: ερυθρος, which is just regular red (what red blood cells are named for), and πυρρος (of which πυρινος is a variant), which is fire-red.

    • @MidnightTea7
      @MidnightTea7 4 роки тому +101

      @@xaralamposkarapaulos5225 No, the video isn't lying. The fact that the world is ancient doesn't mean that it's *as ancient* as names for other colors - ancient Greek didn't spring fully-formed into existence in one day. For modern people words Cyano and Galano may be old, but - given that this information is based on pretty extensive research - it's simply not as old as the others, thus supporting the premise.

  • @beberivera7011
    @beberivera7011 4 роки тому +189

    This is why languages fascinate me: there are tangible differences in thought processes that are rooted in the language we speak.

    • @conure3029
      @conure3029 4 роки тому

      if u wanna read a philosopher who’d agree w u, check out Derrida! (warning: he’s not the most accessible)

    • @ashleyydong
      @ashleyydong 4 роки тому +1

      That is such a beautiful description

    • @Pippis78
      @Pippis78 4 роки тому +5

      Me too, language tells a lot about the people, their overall mindset and culture. Like Arabic - quite dramatic/emotional, very poetic. Japanese - riddled with double entandres and non-direct ways of expression.
      I often mix foreign words in when I speak because sometimes there just isn't a word for a thing in my language or it has more power in that other language.
      In my native language Finnish it's very easy to just make up words on the spot and people still totally understand what you mean 😀 I think that's pretty special? Finnish is quite flexible even though it's quite complicated, you can express yourself super specifically/accurately and pack a lot of information in just a few words. As a people we are known for being very straightforward and really bad at small talk. People of few but poignant words. Honest to a fault. Very practical and efficient.

    • @aleleliah
      @aleleliah 4 роки тому +1

      @@Pippis78 i wonder if all nordic languages are similar to how you would describe finnish. I beg your pardon if I seem to stereotype you guys

    • @Pippis78
      @Pippis78 4 роки тому +2

      @@aleleliah No harm 🙂 But actually Finnish isn't a nordic language - or at least not at all related to the other nordic languages. Finnish is part of the finno-ugric language family. Estonian is very similar and Hungarian is a more distant relative. Ofcourse we do have lots of loan words from swedish and Russian especially.
      Pretty much all the other languages in europe and Russian too are indo-european languages.
      It's a VERY common misconception that Finnish is either similar to swedish or to russian. When infact russian and swedish are closer to each other than Finnish to either one of them 😆
      But culturally we have a lot in common with the other nordic countries and there are many things in the nature of people that are similar.
      The other nordic languages are very similar, but from the perspective of a finn - if you learn just one language like english or swedish, then it's quite easy to learn German, Dutch, French, Spanish... To us they all are pretty similar.
      The interesting thing many people are not at all aware is that modern english is in big part Swedish(/Danish/Norwegian).
      Old/middle(?) English mixed and merged with the language of the "viking" settlers (they weren't just raiders, they settled there and never left, immersed in the population). They were related languages to begin with, but this merge happened later.
      Yeah 😂 I LOVE languages. Wish I had gone to study that properly.

  • @Croviajo
    @Croviajo 2 місяці тому +1

    In Morocco we also have the same color name for blue and green which is ⴰⵣⴳⵣⴰⵡ pronounced (Azgzaw) but in the other hand we have three different reds

  • @freddysamjacob363
    @freddysamjacob363 4 роки тому +554

    "Language impacts your perception of everything."
    The movie Arrival makes much more sense now.

    • @ashleywyatt7114
      @ashleywyatt7114 4 роки тому +20

      Love that movie

    • @tylerasmith52
      @tylerasmith52 4 роки тому +14

      THISSSS! This was the first thing I thought about after watching this, amazing film.

    • @promontorium
      @promontorium 4 роки тому +24

      This is something I tell people about. It's true language can alter and shape your perception of reality. But ultimately there's never going to be a language that actually breaks down space-time.

    • @briancooley8777
      @briancooley8777 4 роки тому +5

      promontorium you sure about that?

    • @parmaxolotl
      @parmaxolotl 4 роки тому +20

      The movie/book exaggerated it for storytelling purposes. It's essentially set in a universe where the "Strong" Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis is true. Linguists in real life commonly accepted that a "Weak" version of the hypothesis is true. So, thankfully, in real life, Newspeak probably wouldn't hurt your thinking ability that much.

  • @Brindlebrother
    @Brindlebrother 3 роки тому +1178

    A huge portion of the human experience resides only in our minds. It's crazy, bro

    • @NurseSnow2U
      @NurseSnow2U 3 роки тому +13

      It truly is wild.

    • @ShubhamSingh-cw5pd
      @ShubhamSingh-cw5pd 3 роки тому +47

      Not huge.. All human experience.. Basically it is like, every human is living in its own illusion.. And your sense of reality could be different from mine..

    • @RedPlaystationController
      @RedPlaystationController 3 роки тому +1

      Tell that to God when you meet him.

    • @RedPlaystationController
      @RedPlaystationController 3 роки тому +1

      @@kidgenius8170 lol no maybe demons

    • @Questlikeajourney
      @Questlikeajourney 3 роки тому +5

      @@RedPlaystationController if God could be mistaken for a demon that easily I think you'd need to question your own faith

  • @rickycorgain5506
    @rickycorgain5506 3 роки тому +1557

    Title: “Why ancient Greeks couldn’t see ‘blue’?””
    Video: they didnt call it “blue”

    • @TeenWithACarrotIDK
      @TeenWithACarrotIDK 3 роки тому +5

      @@jekenzeR 3:13

    • @PSYCHOBEVO
      @PSYCHOBEVO 3 роки тому +45

      @@jekenzeR that's ridiculous. Of course they can see blue. You don't become colorblind to a color just because you don't have a word to distinguish it.

    • @ammakko
      @ammakko 3 роки тому +18

      yeah the title is borderline misleading

    • @ttdttd4211
      @ttdttd4211 3 роки тому +1

      Daang so they only see the water as black....that is scary.

    • @LordDaret
      @LordDaret 3 роки тому +4

      @@PSYCHOBEVO yeah you do. If you don’t have blue, then the Greeks called it black/grey.

  • @GSKSupreme
    @GSKSupreme 6 місяців тому +1

    1:13 How your researchers didn't find 'Blue', 'Blue' is mentioned in Indian texts several times as 'Neela'. In Shiva Purana it is mentioned that During Samudramanthan Shiva drank poison and his throat became blue, that's why Shiva is called 'Neelakantha', 'Neel' means 'Blue' and 'Kantha' means 'Throat'. Peacock is also mentioned as blue. Then how ain't you finding blue anywhere in Hindu texts?

  • @GS-qe3pt
    @GS-qe3pt 4 роки тому +323

    Scandinavian people: "Hold my eyes"

    • @M_Archive
      @M_Archive 4 роки тому +6

      LMFAO

    • @EMSpdx
      @EMSpdx 4 роки тому +2

      This!

    • @poggersbutthole8444
      @poggersbutthole8444 4 роки тому

      Lmao hah

    • @Antonio18677
      @Antonio18677 4 роки тому

      Not true it’s green eyes actually check your facts

    • @watata1t
      @watata1t 4 роки тому +3

      @@Antonio18677 what do you mean? Most common eye colour? Green probably, but that is because Green and Brown are the same , green just have less pigment, but they are a dominant genetic trate, where as blue is reseive, but the blue eye color was a genetic mutation with origins from scamdinavia, so sometime it was the more comon eye color, otherwise ot would have been rooted out a long time ago

  • @roy04
    @roy04 4 роки тому +554

    That's like saying there is no brown, only dull orange
    Oh wait. there's a video on that as well

    • @c-bass2777
      @c-bass2777 4 роки тому +15

      Oh hey "I understood that reference" 😄

    • @davincent98
      @davincent98 4 роки тому +2

      @@c-bass2777 yeah, me too

    • @daas3715
      @daas3715 4 роки тому +7

      We're on a similar youtube algorithm?

    • @nanaphobe
      @nanaphobe 4 роки тому +1

      @@daas3715 funny how the brown video is below this one on my recommends

    • @quantum.9883
      @quantum.9883 4 роки тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/wh4aWZRtTwU/v-deo.html This one??

  • @Smd3580
    @Smd3580 3 роки тому +174

    I found that last part fascinating. Once you give a name for something, it starts seeming a lot more distinct than it actually might be. This is why labels are so dangerous.

    • @Andyatl2002
      @Andyatl2002 3 роки тому +8

      You know I like to know what’s Anti Freeze and what’s not dude

    • @morbhainwilks4237
      @morbhainwilks4237 3 роки тому +1

      @@Andyatl2002 I love a bit of Anti-freeze on my cereal...

    • @Plumberboi91
      @Plumberboi91 3 роки тому +2

      Labels are dangerous....you're joking right?

    • @Smd3580
      @Smd3580 3 роки тому +2

      @@Plumberboi91 No, I wasn't joking. I thought the tone was quite clear.
      Why do you say that?

    • @Plumberboi91
      @Plumberboi91 3 роки тому +1

      @@Smd3580 you're scared of lables

  • @nelsonf.r.3587
    @nelsonf.r.3587 2 місяці тому +1

    This is interesting. As a Tanzanian, Swahili is my native language and we still don’t have a swahili word for the color Blue.

  • @randomlylegend
    @randomlylegend 4 роки тому +122

    0:43 "things that we normally call blue"
    V O I L E T S H E E P

    • @mysmirandam.6618
      @mysmirandam.6618 4 роки тому

      Lol

    • @klayman2
      @klayman2 4 роки тому +1

      you could say a black sheep could come off as a blueish tint and be called a violet sheep

    • @joshbentley2307
      @joshbentley2307 4 роки тому

      @@klayman2 I think it’s more likely that violet just had a different meaning in the region that he lived in during that time period.
      There were extremely few coloured books back then and they’d be very expensive. And colours like blue, purple, orange ECT are extremely rare to come across in nature.
      So all you would have to go off is someone explaining the colour.
      We still can’t describe colours properly today, so the chances are that they couldn’t back then either.

    • @wolfmistresswilderr6579
      @wolfmistresswilderr6579 4 роки тому +2

      V O I L E T

  • @risky02218
    @risky02218 3 роки тому +1630

    "Red is always first and Blue is always last."
    Sarge: "You have my attention, soldier."

  • @AleQuag
    @AleQuag 3 роки тому +1804

    Meanwhile in the year 3000: "Why Zoomers couldn't see the color awusakiptoken"

    • @Augustus-mk1du
      @Augustus-mk1du 3 роки тому +77

      because are eyes cant see ultra violet yet

    • @Joecrouse
      @Joecrouse 3 роки тому +47

      @@Augustus-mk1du OUR eyes you derp

    • @madaxgaming6405
      @madaxgaming6405 3 роки тому +35

      This is an example to realize just of how stupid this video is

    • @danillolucio3107
      @danillolucio3107 3 роки тому +2

      I get it

    • @chrissears9912
      @chrissears9912 3 роки тому +1

      ...and couldn't pronounce it

  • @Ceejay-s9e
    @Ceejay-s9e 3 місяці тому

    The part when you basically said reality is what are brains make it... Was trippy AF

  • @huntercampbelltv9605
    @huntercampbelltv9605 3 роки тому +614

    I'm Native American and in my Lakota Language we have always had blue, it is "Thó" and yellow is "Zi" so green is "Thózi"

    • @outofthisworld93
      @outofthisworld93 3 роки тому +17

      Oh, that's so interesting!

    • @fawful94
      @fawful94 3 роки тому +7

      So it's literally like when Reese from Malcolm "discovered" green? Interesting!

    • @dirtyhorse5090
      @dirtyhorse5090 3 роки тому +2

      I paint my horse with duck manure

    • @TheOperationB
      @TheOperationB 3 роки тому +1

      Hau hau tahansi

    • @savagecatgt
      @savagecatgt 3 роки тому +1

      Thank you for sharing this! TIL!

  • @musicguy20
    @musicguy20 4 роки тому +272

    It’s like when orange used to be called red because they didn’t have a word for it.

    • @EudoAraujo
      @EudoAraujo 4 роки тому +19

      To this day, older people where I live call the color orange "burnt yellow".

    • @Samurollie
      @Samurollie 4 роки тому +9

      Or when brown was just a darker orange

    • @cezarcatalin1406
      @cezarcatalin1406 4 роки тому +3

      Samuel Lucas
      Technology connections fans approve.

    • @aiko9393
      @aiko9393 4 роки тому +2

      My dad called my orange shirt pink once. No problem with color sight or language. He's just weird.

    • @ejzera8188
      @ejzera8188 4 роки тому +1

      The color is named after the fruit actually

  • @garfieldh.8820
    @garfieldh.8820 4 роки тому +344

    Fun fact: The modern Chinese character meaning blue (蓝) refered to the indigo plant in Ancient Chinese. Blue was refered to as "青", along with green, teal and, in some cases, even black.

    • @jameowi
      @jameowi 4 роки тому +10

      yea, when i was reading old poem from chinese, they will describe "blue sky'' as "green sky" and “blue ocean" as "green ocean"

    • @novdelta381
      @novdelta381 4 роки тому +7

      Cool thing about blue and Sinitic languages: this character (藍/蓝) had the meaning of "blue" much earlier than some other cultures, one of the most famous appearences being in "青出於藍/青出于蓝", meaning "the student has surpassed his or her teacher", and first appearing in Xunzi, a text from the Warring Dynasties period. As a comparison, the Greeks only decided to loan the French word "bleu" for their word for blue, "μπλε", if my memory has not failed me.

    • @garfieldh.8820
      @garfieldh.8820 4 роки тому +2

      @@novdelta381 I believe the 蓝 in your example refers to the indigo plant. The phrase by itself means "blue is obtained from the indigo plant (but is bluer than the plant itself)". Although I have no idea when Chinese started to refer to the color as 蓝

    • @novdelta381
      @novdelta381 4 роки тому +2

      Well, I was referring to the phrase itself when I was talking about the Warring States peroid, and the phrase literally means "cyan comes out of blue". I am aware of earlier uses of 藍, like in the Shang Dynasty Oracle Bone inscriptions iirc. So they used the character 藍 for at least 1500 ish, possibly fewer, years without the meaning of blue

    • @sunflu
      @sunflu 4 роки тому +6

      @@garfieldh.8820 《说文》 “蓝,染青草也” means: blue, the grass that can dye the color blue. The character has the radical “艹”, which stands for grass. The word blue came directly from the grass which leaves can be used to dye the color blue.
      AT the time of XunZi. (313B. C. -238B. C. ), “青出于蓝而胜于蓝”, 蓝 is still the name of the grass, and the color blue is named after 青.
      But from Wei Jin and Southern Northern dynasty, (220-420) there are already documents using the word 蓝 directly to refer the color. But it didn’t make into the dictionaries. Means people already use this word to refer the color blue at the daily use but was still not recognized officially. 梁·江淹《杂体诗序》:“譬犹蓝朱成彩,杂错之变无穷。”
      From Tang Dynasty(618-907), 蓝 was commonly used to refer as the color, 杜甫《冬到金华山观》诗:“上有蔚蓝天,垂光抱琼台。” 蓝 means exactly as the blue we are talking about today.

  • @donniejo8888
    @donniejo8888 5 місяців тому

    I love you guys. My grand babies have learned so much from your Channel THANK YOU

  • @SpartanLeonidas1821
    @SpartanLeonidas1821 2 роки тому +1258

    Regarding Homer's reference to the "wine-dark" seas, I recommended for people to take a cruise around the Aegean & Ionian Seas, once you sail off the coast, the color you will see the most is PERFECTLY described by using the word "wine-dark" seas, as it has almost a purplish Blueberry Hue.
    Hope that helps! 👍
    -Sebastianos the Philhellene 🇬🇷©
    Edit: Wow, almost 1,000 Likes! Thank You everyone. I guess many of you have seen it or know what I am talking about then!

    • @gbatzanos
      @gbatzanos 2 роки тому +47

      Nevertheless, Homer’s work is poetic. It’s not meant to be historically or scientifically correct, but to entertain.

    • @fernit0505
      @fernit0505 2 роки тому +23

      @@gbatzanos and also HE WAS BLIND

    • @rodmunduruca2587
      @rodmunduruca2587 2 роки тому +13

      @@fernit0505 homer was probably not a person let alone blind

    • @Garry_Combine
      @Garry_Combine 2 роки тому +16

      @@rodmunduruca2587 citation? You can't just make a claim like that without proof

    • @person10283
      @person10283 2 роки тому +11

      @@Garry_Combine I mean nothing has been proven or disproved regarding who homer actually was, but there’s a fair chance that homer was more than one person- I‘ve read quite a few articles about it, although I can’t remember the names just now
      (Maybe I can share you a link to one if you’d like?)

  • @samh808
    @samh808 4 роки тому +393

    1:53 “Blue is the final color“ Purple and Orange: 😔

    • @FarfettilLejl
      @FarfettilLejl 4 роки тому +21

      Magenta entered the chat

    • @zn316
      @zn316 4 роки тому +17

      Purple doesnt exist though Violet does

    • @shrexyavocado7828
      @shrexyavocado7828 4 роки тому +6

      Grey and Brown: *hello*

    • @Geerice
      @Geerice 4 роки тому +4

      @@zn316 Yet there's a word for it

    • @soosramirez2510
      @soosramirez2510 4 роки тому +2

      i’m sure it’s bc they’re not primary colors

  • @Giannas1096
    @Giannas1096 3 роки тому +2325

    Another good analogy for this would be like cleaning the house. There’s clean, and then there’s MOM clean. Only Mom’s can see the difference, it takes a trained eye 🤣

    • @samuelvega9591
      @samuelvega9591 3 роки тому +25

      73 likes in one day? Notify me when this comment ages like fine wine and has 1k+ likes
      EDIT: Notify me when it hits 2k
      EDIT: 2,1k? Wow this comment ain't stopping getting the likes

    • @dale4853
      @dale4853 3 роки тому +8

      moms. No apostrophe.

    •  3 роки тому +13

      When you take pride in your work, there is always another level it can be taken to.

    • @xyzmorra5695
      @xyzmorra5695 3 роки тому +10

      Mom clean just means she thinks it's a bigger deal than what it really is 😐

    • @sutters7251
      @sutters7251 3 роки тому +9

      More like DAD clean. That’s when dad actually does the cleaning. It gets hit like a military campaign. Scrubbed buffed purged cleaned to within an inch of its life!!! The trouble is one room takes dads three times longer than Mom clean. That’s why dad clean happens once a year!!!

  • @wensday2724
    @wensday2724 2 місяці тому

    Ancient Egyptians loved their blues. Especially that 18th Dynasty.