But the person who designed that emulsion does.
And there's the problem.
You would think so. But... That's what this is all (the different threads this has surfaced in) about.
As I've said, PE was explaining it as it relates to color photography. Where has he said it explains all color phenomena? "Tri-colour mumbo-jumbo"? First, it's not mumbo-jumbo. It's very easy to understand. Second, look at the spec. sheet for any color film and you will see the tri-color method applied. As you know, I'm sure.
Completely irrelevant it is here too.
And when pushed despite of that, misleading and incorrect also.
Well, yeah. Hence tri-color filtration.
Duh...
So you do not see what's going on.
You don't see how yellow is not a mix of whatever two colours, but the colour a photon can have. A photon an emulsion shows a response to, despite it not being a tri-colour emulsion.
You don't see that the tri-colour trickery has to be employed to differentiate between the colours, so you can use panchromatic B&W emulsions to create something you can perceive as separate colours.
You don't see that it is all irrelevant, because we were not talking about anything like this. Until someone brought it up to give some 'relevance' to completely irrelevant comments.
Round and round and round and round and...
The going is remarkably tough on APUG today.