If you put every color of paint together, it will be dark brown or black. If you put all colors of light together, it becomes white.
2007-09-24 16:53:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Religiously speaking, Crayola's incorporation of both colors in a box symbolizes an ideal of racial concord. Crayola, wanting to please the mass market, includes the color white... like.. who uses white crayons??? They're only good when you have BLACK paper... which is almost never....!!!
Black, or the lack of light(white) wouldn't exist without the white, and vise versa... it's like ''ebony and ivory... living in perfect harmony''....
nah what Im sayin?
2007-09-24 18:29:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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black is the absence of color, just as darkness is the absence of light. Those crayons are there because black and white provide contrast. Religiously speaking of course
2007-09-24 18:39:39
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answer #3
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answered by mixedguy18 1
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Neal Walshe, the author of Conversations with God, said, "In the absence of that which is not, that which is, is not." So, we wouldn't even know black or white without the other. We would not know short, if everything was short. Besides, sometimes I color on white paper and sometimes I color on top of another color, and/or on another color of paper, so I need both colors in my crayon box.
2007-09-24 18:37:47
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answer #4
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answered by The Duke 2
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They are both valid colors. In RGB color space, black would correspond to an RGB vector with a constant of zero for each RGB component (the origin). Check out the link for an illustration. Of course, this has absolutely has nothing to do with religion.
2007-09-24 18:26:38
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Blue
2007-09-24 18:20:48
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answer #6
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answered by Someone who cares 7
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Because Crayola is a sin?
:S Stoning time!
2007-09-24 18:31:04
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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No one said black is the absence of white. That's stupid.
2007-09-24 18:21:22
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Ergo: white is the absence of black. We live in a dimension of duality; up/down, life/death, yin/yang, etc.
2007-09-24 18:23:37
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answer #9
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answered by CJ Cole 2
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Technically speaking, the white crayon is actually black. We see it reflecting white, not it's actual color. The same is with the bible. The good are actually bad. Read the first book of the bible. Humans are punished for learning and nearly every living mammal is killed by the so-called protagonist. The antagonist actually helped humans learned and killed not one soul.
2007-09-24 18:21:49
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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