Skip to Content
Advertisement
Psychology

Why Ancient Greeks Might Have Had Much Different Colors Than We Do

Ingenious Mazviita Chirimuuta

As a philosopher who studies the meaning of color, Mazviita Chirimuuta is well aware that philosophy can easily get stuck on that topic. In her recent book, Outside Color, Chirimuuta tries to move beyond one of the major hang-ups when thinking about color, arguing that the property should be defined not by the world outside or inside our heads, but an interaction of both.

Featured Video

Here she discusses one way in which people can use very different ideas to refer to, and think about, colors. For more on the philosophy of color, watch her whole Ingenious interview.

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Psychology

Explore Psychology

Can Plants Count?

It seems as though they can at least track the number of events in their environment

April 1, 2026

When Fake Supplements Work

A new twist on the placebo effect

March 27, 2026

The Internet Has Not Killed Reading—or Attention Spans

An interview with Kevin Ashton, MIT technology pioneer and author of The Story of Stories

March 24, 2026

Heat Probably Doesn’t Make You More Aggressive

An interview with a behavioral economist about cake, climate change, and cooperation

March 20, 2026

Did Music Give Rise to Language?

An interview with a music cognition researcher about the evolutionary roots of music

March 18, 2026