Multi-leveled objects: Color as a case study

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Abstract

The paper presents color as a case study for the analysis of phenomena that pertain to several levels of reality and are typically framed by different sciences and disciplines. Color, in fact, is studied by physics, biology, phenomenology, and esthetics, among others. Our thesis is that color is a different entity for each level of reality, and that for this reason color generates different observables in the epistemologies of the different sciences. By analyzing color as a paradigmatic case of an entity naturally spreading over different levels of reality, the paper raises the question as to whether making explicit the usually implicit ontological assumptions embedded within the different observables exploited by the different sciences may eventually clarify some of the difficulties of developing a comprehensive theory of color. © 2014 Albertazzi and Poli.

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Albertazzi, L., & Poli, R. (2014). Multi-leveled objects: Color as a case study. Frontiers in Psychology, 5(JUL). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00592

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