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The Specific Brightness of Colors

Bertha M Luckey, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Abstract

More work has been done in the field of vision than in that of any other single sense. From Aristotle's time to the present, there have been many researches and much study along this line, some carefully done, others carelessly worked out and of no value. The facts discovered are manifold. The eye and vision have been studied from all angles. As is always the case, whether the facts are few or many, there are theories which strive to arrange the known phenomena in such a way that they may best be explained, and by means of which new facts may be predicted. As more and more facts are made known these theories become more and more comprehensive and complicated until some one starting from a new point of view evolves a new and simple theory which will encompass. more of the known facts.

Subject Area

Physical chemistry|Chemistry

Recommended Citation

Luckey, Bertha M, "The Specific Brightness of Colors" (1916). ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln. AAIDP14114.
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAIDP14114

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