"Much the best philosophically orientated book about colour that has been written. . . . It has none of
the philosophical crudity which mars scientific accounts of colour, and none of the scientific ignorance which
makes so many philosophical accounts of colour worthless or worse. . . . Time and again I found myself unexpectedly
convinced at a point whose opposite I had believed. I have in mind particularly the later sections on �Other colours,
other minds�, language foci, and �boundaries and indeterminacy�. It is annoying, but also exhilarating, to be relieved
of some stubborn and treasured opinions."
--Jonathan Westphal, Mind
Hackett Publishing Company Web Site, August, 2000
Summary
This expanded edition of C. L. Hardin�s ground-breaking work on color features a new chapter, �Further Thoughts:
1993,� in which the author revisits the dispute between color objectivists and subjectivists from the perspective
of the ecology, genetics, and evolution of color vision, and brings to bear new data on individual variability
in color perception.
Awarded the 1986 Johnsonian Prize in Philosophy. Published with the aid of a grant from the National Endowment
for the Humanities