Tuesday, 18 October 2022

Through Tinted Spectacles

 

In the 1939 classic film “The Wizard of Oz,” Dorothy visits The Emerald City, so named because virtually the entirety of the city is, in fact, emerald in color. As you may know, the film is not always completely faithful to the book upon which it is based. In L. Frank Baum’s original “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” (1900), while the walls of The Emerald City are green, the city itself is not. In the book, upon entry into the city, everyone is required to wear green-tinted spectacles (explained as an effort to protect the eyes of the residents from the "brightness and glory" of the city). These spectacles have the effect of making everything appear green even though the city is objectively no greener than any other.

Dorothy was shocked to learn the truth from the Wizard of Oz: “But isn’t everything here green?” asked Dorothy. “No more than in any other city,” replied Oz; “but when you wear green spectacles, why of course everything you see looks green to you…[M]y people have worn green glasses on their eyes so long that most of them think it really is an Emerald City[i]

Given that the reason that the residents of the city believe it to be emerald is the filtering effect of their colored glasses, it follows that if instead of green tinted spectacles, they wore scarlet tinted spectacles, the residents would think they lived in The Scarlet City. If they wore turquoise tinted spectacles, they would believe that they lived in The Turquoise City. If the residents wore magenta tinted spectacles, they would think that they were residents of The Magenta City. And so on…

It further follows that if those wearing scarlet, turquoise, magenta, and emerald tinted spectacles, were to look at the same item at the same time and under the same conditions, each would make a different judgment regarding the color of the item, regardless of its actual color—a judgment that conforms not to the objective reality of the object, but to the color of the lenses through which their respective perceptions are being filtered.

And if the city actually was emerald in color…?

Those viewing a legitimately emerald city through scarlet, turquoise, and magenta tinted spectacles would still incorrectly judge the city to be scarlet, turquoise, and magenta. Those wearing emerald spectacles would make an ostensibly “correct” judgment, but would that judgment be justified? Would the wearer know the color of the city? Even if the judgment of the wearer of the green spectacles corresponds with the true color of the city, the correctness of that judgment would be entirely accidental, and that judgment would only be justified in precisely the same way and to precisely the same degree as the incorrect judgments of those who are wearing glasses with the alternate tinting.

If one looks at their broken watch that just happens to display the current correct time, can one really be said to know the correct time?

Wearers of different colored spectacles are all equally justified in their judgments of the color of the city. Wearing tinted spectacles makes it impossible to distinguish between the true color of the city and all other possibilities. Even if the city is indeed emerald, the wearer of the emerald tinted spectacles is not justified in their judgment that the city is emerald. Through tinted spectacles, one cannot know the color of the city.

The Wizard observes that the residents of The Emerald City “have worn green glasses on their eyes so long that most of them think it really is an Emerald City.” (italics added) It seems that after wearing the tinted spectacles long enough, the wearer will no longer judge that the city appears to them to be emerald in color; instead, they to fail to notice that it is the glasses that are making things look green, and start interpreting their filtered perceptions as confirmation of their belief that the city is indeed emerald in color.

Given that (i) those wearing the various tinted spectacles are equally (un)justified and equally confident in their respective judgments with regards to the color of the city, each can be confronted by potential evidence that they are wrong—eye witness reports of differing colors from those wearing the different colors—and feel secure in their rejection of any and all counter-evidence because of their own experience; and given that (ii) those wearing tinted spectacles fail to notice that they are wearing them, it will be impossible for the residents to know the true color of their city, and impossible to discover if they are mistaken, until they can be brought to the realization that they are, in fact, wearing tinted spectacles, and that they ought to take them off.



[i] Baum, L. F. & Denslow, W. W. (1900) The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Chicago; New York: G.M. Hill Co., 1900.

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