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Albert Moukheiber

Your Brain Is Playing Tricks On You

  • Sabin Chaulagainhas quoted6 months ago
    human beings tend to blindly trust their perception, to the point of considering it to be shared by everyone.
  • Shizhas quoted6 months ago
    Without thinking, does the black figure seem to be facing us, or does it have its back to us? Are you above it, or below? You’re hesitating…

    Now look at the image below: the individual clearly seems to be facing us, their elbows leant on the barrier, and they’re located above you. And now that you have this image in mind, look at the first version of the image again. The interpretation you make of it will copy the scenario that image (a) led you to see, and now the black figure appears to be facing you at a low-angle shot
  • AURAhas quoted6 months ago
    brain, which shelters our knowledge, operates through estimates. The outcome is that our knowledge of things and of the world is always relative.
  • mrirtaza2020has quoted5 months ago
    something unreal has just happened. This is what we call “magic”.
  • sharifaha141has quoted6 months ago
    perception goes through our senses first.
  • nrfarina19has quoted6 months ago
    “We don’t see the world as it is, but rather as we are
  • chawarexhimanshu2has quoted9 days ago
    The brain creates templates for absolutely everything: our friendships, our romantic relationships, our concept of work, our political opinions…
  • chawarexhimanshu2has quoted9 days ago
    brain tells us stories that help us better navigate
  • Aida Avdichas quoted19 days ago
    The five senses and the brain obviously work together so that human beings can indeed perceive the world. But our eyes, our ears, our tongue and our skin are actually receptors which will transform signals reflected by the outside world (optical, acoustic, olfactory…) into electrical signals. It is these thousands of electrical signals that our brain will process and filter, and which will enable us to mentally reconstruct the world.
  • Aida Avdichas quoted22 days ago
    Isaac Asimov: the relativity of wrong. Contrary to popular belief, right and wrong are rarely ever absolute, but often rather relative.
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