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    Will we find Eden? Lands of Magic? Our heart's desire? Or will we find worlds just like our own?   Some of us may have already visited other universes - the evidence may be confusing memories - improbable places or people we have seen.

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Observation in a WYSIWYG world

May 7 2001 at 10:06 PM
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Mike F.  (no login)

A properly trained hypnotic subject can pick a single card out out of a deck of playing cards after having seen only the back. The subject can do this repeatedly, on demand. A person in a normal wakened state cannot duplicate the feat even by examining the cards with a magnifying glass.

Another hypnotic subject can hear and understand a whispered conversation across a roomful of people who are talking in a normal tone of voice. This has been demonstrated with blindfolded subjects in order to prove they were not lipreading.

This tends to prove that we have the visual and auditory acuity to do these things, but something in our brains filters out what we don't 'need' to see or hear. (Some animals can only 'see' things that move, while they're moving, even though their eyes look like they're built just like ours.)

A study done a few years ago showed that we experience 'now' in 1½ to 3 second, overlapping slices and that 'now' is no shorter than 1½ seconds. Events get blended together in a kind of persistence of vision effect.

Much of what is actually detectable by our senses is virtually ignored by the conscious mind. We never 'experience' it.

Which brings me to my question. What filters are hard wired into our brain and what do they instruct our brains to ignore? Can we say reality is only a WYSIWYG thing? What are we missing?

 

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