Yeah, but I don't think we'd understand it as real color...just as temperature variations on a scale. If we couldn't see color, we'd only know it by a numerical value of some sort. Just like we can't see ultraviolet and infrared, and so only understand them as heat signatures or number values.
Yes, but we have built those "organs."
COBE, WMAP, Planck, HST, Swift GRB Explorer, Chandra, NuSTAR, Spitzer, WISE, HSO, DAMPE, LISA Pathfinder... and the up coming James Webb Space Telescope.
Then there's airborne observatories, telescopes and instruments we've mounted on planes:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airborne_observatory
NASA had a pair of jets just this year chase totality during the eclipse. On the ground, we experienced threeish minutes of totality. In the air, they experienced over seven minutes.
We've been building "eyes" for thousands of years to better understand the universe and our place in it.
The result?
Data. Discoveries. Boundless Knowledge.
Awe inspiring imagery that often sees use as a computer wallpaper. Hundreds of generations of explorers with a visceral and insatiable thirst to just know, to understand.
What if everyone see's color differently and nobody knows about it? What if my eyes see green as green while your eyes see green as blue, but since they're called green then nobody tells anyone off about it. If I were to look through someone else's eyes, would everything look like an inverted mess that to them looks beautiful?
.... we can't even see the full spectrum of light... there's a LOT of things we are missing. Birds can detect magnetic lines, sharks can sense electric currents and pit vipers can "see" heat.
COBE, WMAP, Planck, HST, Swift GRB Explorer, Chandra, NuSTAR, Spitzer, WISE, HSO, DAMPE, LISA Pathfinder... and the up coming James Webb Space Telescope.
That's a short list of the hundreds of "eyes" we've built and launched into space.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_telescopes
Not to mention the thousands of ground based observatories like , Paranal, Atacama, Mauna Kea, Socorro, Jodrell Bank, Parkes, Chajnantor and Aracebo to name a few.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observatory#Ground-based_observatories
Then there's airborne observatories, telescopes and instruments we've mounted on planes:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airborne_observatory
NASA had a pair of jets just this year chase totality during the eclipse. On the ground, we experienced threeish minutes of totality. In the air, they experienced over seven minutes.
The result?
Data. Discoveries. Boundless Knowledge.
Awe inspiring imagery that often sees use as a computer wallpaper. Hundreds of generations of explorers with a visceral and insatiable thirst to just know, to understand.
And this:
http://www.chromoscope.net
Which is a little more in line with your post.
illuminati: Stay right where you are