Hmmm... This is an absolutely great topic for discussion, and for a number of even greater reasons. Moreover, still, when it is presented and conducted rightly it becomes one of those extraordinarily rare occasions in any scientific debate when the final theoretical conclusions, as well as the experimental results and observations, complement each other so clearly that in the end no participant or witness to it could--objectively--raise any arguments against them. The only drawback to all that, I guess, is the unavoidable level of 'involvedness' under the current circumstances. Nevertheless, for what is worth I will give it a try (and see where it all leads).
Before anything else I ought to point out that although one certain fact is crucially important in the matter we're discussing, not one of the thus far participants in this thread (including Liam W.) have made any reference to it. That most important fact is that in order for an observer to see the colours Liam W. saw the spatial orientation of the prism must be with its apex pointing "up". That is the only way for an observer to see the blue end of the spectrum at the top of the prism and the red end towards its bottom, when a so-called
subjective prismatic observation (as Liam's was) is conducted.
Effectively, now, all prismatic observations of light are conducted in 2 ways. First, there is the classic Newtonian way--in which a beam of light is passed through a prism and then projected onto a screen. This is conventionally viewed as an
objective observation, and the spectrum it produces is the ROYGBV one. And then there is that so-called subjective type of prismatic observation, which produces a reversed VBGYOR spectrum. Newton was aware of both these spectral distributions, but he only provided some explanation for the so-called objective, ROYGBV one. About the VBGYOR distribution, on the other hand, he never ventured any further than saying “Prismaticall colours appeare in the eye in a contrary order”... See
here[/PLAIN] for more, and I will come back (if required).