If you cover a brown chair with blue paint, it becomes a blue chair. There is no answer to the question “What color is a chair?”, because how a chair scatters light depends on context.
Chairs are non-fundamentally colored, so the only question you can even try to answer is “What color is this chair?”
Y’all are trying to rely on a dichotomy between “Fundamental particles are fundamentally colored” and “Fundamental particles have no color.” That is a false dichotomy. The color of an electron depends on context—congrats, you have shown that it is not fundamentally colored, we agree.
If you cover a brown chair with blue paint, it becomes a blue chair. There is no answer to the question “What color is a chair?”, because how a chair scatters light depends on context.
Chairs are non-fundamentally colored, so the only question you can even try to answer is “What color is this chair?”
Y’all are trying to rely on a dichotomy between “Fundamental particles are fundamentally colored” and “Fundamental particles have no color.” That is a false dichotomy. The color of an electron depends on context—congrats, you have shown that it is not fundamentally colored, we agree.
Who are you arguing against? Do Nozick or Hanson say that anything is fundamentally coloured?