The forced perspective rooms also provide the illusion that a person in one corner of the room is physically larger than someone standing in an opposing corner. Some spinning silhouettes likewise can make it impossible for our brains to determine in which direction it is spinning. Putting a few of those inside of one of those forced perspective rooms, and a few spinning Rick and Morty style wormholes projected onto a hovering holographic cloud in the center would be a dazzling work of art the likes of which Andy Warhole would have no doubt enjoyed taking LSD in while listening to the drum solo in Iron Butterfly's "In a Gada da Vida". Someone should make this. I want to see it before I go completely blind or mad or something... But the thread digresses. Sorry QQ; you were saying?...
Ah! My eyes aren't connected to my brain! Well I guess if I'm my own brain it's objective. If my eyes are trying to comprehend when information my brain received then it's subjective...
Ah! My eyes aren't connected to my brain! Well I guess if I'm my own brain it's objective. If my eyes are trying to comprehend when information my brain received then it's subjective...
Ah! My eyes aren't connected to my brain! Well I guess if I'm my own brain it's objective. If my eyes are trying to comprehend when information my brain received then it's subjective...
Tonight on 'It's the Mind', we examine the phenomenon of deja vu. That strange feeling we sometimes get that we've lived through something before, that what is happening now has already happened. Tonight on 'It's the Mind', we examine the phenomenon of deja vu, that strange feeling we sometimes get that we've ...