Which means that colours DO change when in a differently lit setting. Otherwise there would be nothing to adapt to.
Oh, and since the lightbulb they proposed was BEHIND, your vision adapts to light sources behind. However, we REINTERPRET IT differently. Hence your case has no basis: it's taking two differently lit situations and asserting that one must be right and that the other cannot be.
Color and brightness aren't the same thing fyi.
I know. And brightness and colour are not the same thing either, fyi.
Color is determined by the wavelength of the photon.
WRONG. Light a red apple in no light. Completely dark. What colour does it have? None. Colour of the apple is not a part of the thing, and when you look out, you're looking at things, like apples.
So colour is not inherent to a thing.
Is it inherent to a photon?
No.
Because to a red blind person a photon of wavelength 700nm HAS no colour.
Go out at night. Nice moon out. Not too big. What colour is the green grass? It is still 100% reflecting the same photon range, near enough, as before, but suddenly the garden is colourless.
How come???
According to you, colour is the wavelength of a photon.
Gold is a colour, too. What frequency is that, just for my sake.
But back to the grass. Despite the photon being that same wavelength you cannot see the colour.
So colour is not part of the photon either.
I guess colour must be a LOT more complicated than you thought.
Brightness by the amount of photons hitting your eye (though shorter wavelength = higher energy).
Nope, hv is irrelvant here. Higher energy LIGHT is brightness. Light is not "one photon" any more than humanity is one person.
Did you know that brightness is NOT due only to that? Visual purple is one confounder. Makes the rods more sensitive to photons. Higher quantum efficiency.
But here's another thing. if you shine light on the retina, it will get LESS SENSITIVE. Not because it has been damaged, but it has run out of the chemicals that it uses to signal "I see the light". Loss of the K+ ions causes a back EMF that pulls the next firing of the neuron to not fire quite as strongly.
Guess you never knew that light was so complicated when you mix up colour and brightness, both perceptual terms, not metrolgy ones.
Remember too that this isn't supposed to be a CCD sensor sitting in the pilot's seat. It's supposed to be YOU.
So all those problems of biological reaction, neurophysiology and the gross fakery done by a human's idiotic visual system (tell me you notice the blind spot, go on. your eyes lie to you and you never cared to call it faked unrealistic rubbish) such a person has.