When we use technology in spectrometry, to collect information about a light source, what we collect is raw data identifying the frequencies individually including frequencies that our eyes are incapable of seeing. If we want to make an image out of it, we have to assign colors to frequencies and produce an image we can see. The point is that the color we see, is not as important as what it stands for. Our do the same thing, they assign certain frequencies to colors codes which our brain uses to make sense of what we see. For practical purposes, picking out many frequencies out of a mixture of different frequencies doesn't help us much. There would be no real purpose for that.
On the other hand, you never know what the subconscious knows. Our bodies communicate with itself independent of conscious thought. When light hits us, a signal is sent to the Pineal gland telling us it is day, when we are in the dark, our pineal gland releases melatonin, a hormone which is linked to sleep cycles. Blue light specifically is responsible for halting melatonin production, before bed, if your where goggles which block blue light, your pineal gland can produce melatonin.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melatonin