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by thomassmith65
1239 days ago
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That we perceive paintings of objects as objects is an illusion, clearly. But that is not the same illusion as this "pigeon neck" thing. An illusion is not an illusion if what you perceive is what is actually happening. The whole point of the "pigeon neck" illusion is that it tricks the eye into perceiving areas as growing that we know are incapable of growing. If the areas are inelastic matter, that's a cool effect: we know that a printed image on a transparency sheet cannot truly grow just by sliding it around a table. If the areas are pixels... it's less significant. Nothing is actually moving to start with. It's all neighboring lights flashing on and off. If a group of those lights is part of an object, it's only to the extent that the viewer perceives it as such. Note that this is not the case with other digital illusions. This one in particular is ruined because it relies on a strip of pixels 'belonging' to one of the two (perceived) objects that sandwiches it. |
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There is, objectively, data being presented, which we perceive.
You're glossing over the importance of a particular scale, the scale at which humans operate in on a daily basis, and making the assumption that reality is what's happening at a smaller scale.
This is incomplete.
If we want to talk about the image, the underlying components become progressively less important as the scale decreases. When we view a painting, or an image on a screen, when are less interested in up quarks, down quarks, and electrons, and more interested in the image and the medium.