Honestly, all of this just throws up more and more questions for me, and the more I see, the less I feel as though light can be described as 'rays' or 'beams'.
The same goes for things like 'the speed of light'.
The only thing I really felt as though I could agree with is that light is affected by different mediums and densities. This much is generally observable anyway, in every day life. I didn't really get anything from your post that explains why a cloud would change colour - and I believe that is really what is being observed. I really think that people are getting mixed up between issues of 'illumination' and 'colour'.
I might just be the crazy person in the room, but for me, my posts referring to Goethes theory of colour make the most practical sense in explaining what the OP has described.
It seems more to me that light sources are simply generating a toroidal field around them, which we are somehow able to perceive.
First questions for you, unrelated to my above statements - do you believe the Earth is flat, do you believe there is a firmament, and if so, do you believe the sun is inside or outside the firmament.
Next question, or illustration.
Lets suppose you live on a busy street. It's night time. There is no lighting anywhere, except for one home a little way down the road, say 50 or 60 feet or so. From your position you can see through one of their lit windows.
You can see the illuminated contents of the room.
Supposedly the light source is illuminating its immediate vicinity of 5-10 feet, and then the light is bouncing off of those objects a further 50-60 feet to your eyes, which is why you can see them.
So why then cant the light travel the 50-60ft to your immediate vicinity, light up the area where you are, and then reflect the remaining few feet to your eyes.
Why is the light source lighting up that area for you to see at a distance, but not lighting up where you are? Presumably the same distance overall would be traveled by the 'light beams'?
If they have enough power to light up something locally and still transmit that information to you at a greater distance, why cant they also light up something local to you, when the same distance is being traveled overall, through the same mediums? How does that make any sense?
It seems to me that the light source provides a toroidal illumination field and the strength of the source relates to the area it can illuminate.
Question is, how/why do our eyes actually perceive it?
Here is another random oddity to do with our eyes.
You are at home, minding your own business. You happen to look out the window and see a group of people standing 50feet down the road. Out of idle curiosity you observe them. Immediately one of them turns around and looks directly at you.
What the heck is that?
I've heard suggestions that there is some basic instinct in us that lets us know when a predator is around or some kind of thing. Maybe, who knows? But I don't think that explains this, especially if you are just casually glancing at somebody with no particular malice or intention. There is some literal physical interaction/phenomena taking place.
Of course, the above example does not work 100% of the time with every person you see. I think it depends on the state of mind of the individual you are observing - how intently focused they are on something..... but it absolutely does happen, and I am sure this must have happened to other people here, too.
Sorry for this last bit which is kind of off-topic. It may deserve its own topic.
The same goes for things like 'the speed of light'.
The only thing I really felt as though I could agree with is that light is affected by different mediums and densities. This much is generally observable anyway, in every day life. I didn't really get anything from your post that explains why a cloud would change colour - and I believe that is really what is being observed. I really think that people are getting mixed up between issues of 'illumination' and 'colour'.
I might just be the crazy person in the room, but for me, my posts referring to Goethes theory of colour make the most practical sense in explaining what the OP has described.
It seems more to me that light sources are simply generating a toroidal field around them, which we are somehow able to perceive.
First questions for you, unrelated to my above statements - do you believe the Earth is flat, do you believe there is a firmament, and if so, do you believe the sun is inside or outside the firmament.
Next question, or illustration.
Lets suppose you live on a busy street. It's night time. There is no lighting anywhere, except for one home a little way down the road, say 50 or 60 feet or so. From your position you can see through one of their lit windows.
You can see the illuminated contents of the room.
Supposedly the light source is illuminating its immediate vicinity of 5-10 feet, and then the light is bouncing off of those objects a further 50-60 feet to your eyes, which is why you can see them.
So why then cant the light travel the 50-60ft to your immediate vicinity, light up the area where you are, and then reflect the remaining few feet to your eyes.
Why is the light source lighting up that area for you to see at a distance, but not lighting up where you are? Presumably the same distance overall would be traveled by the 'light beams'?
If they have enough power to light up something locally and still transmit that information to you at a greater distance, why cant they also light up something local to you, when the same distance is being traveled overall, through the same mediums? How does that make any sense?
It seems to me that the light source provides a toroidal illumination field and the strength of the source relates to the area it can illuminate.
Question is, how/why do our eyes actually perceive it?
Here is another random oddity to do with our eyes.
You are at home, minding your own business. You happen to look out the window and see a group of people standing 50feet down the road. Out of idle curiosity you observe them. Immediately one of them turns around and looks directly at you.
What the heck is that?
I've heard suggestions that there is some basic instinct in us that lets us know when a predator is around or some kind of thing. Maybe, who knows? But I don't think that explains this, especially if you are just casually glancing at somebody with no particular malice or intention. There is some literal physical interaction/phenomena taking place.
Of course, the above example does not work 100% of the time with every person you see. I think it depends on the state of mind of the individual you are observing - how intently focused they are on something..... but it absolutely does happen, and I am sure this must have happened to other people here, too.
Sorry for this last bit which is kind of off-topic. It may deserve its own topic.