upside down
#1
Posted 2012-December-30, 06:07
I found this article http://en.wikipedia....tual_adaptation but it doesn't seem to address the basic issue (of whether the brain does anything at all in the first place, i.e. without the glasses).
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2012-December-30, 07:27
With respect to colors, probably impossible to notice directly, but I wonder if the way different colors interact with each other would still work out. Especially given that light mixes differently than paint.
#3
Posted 2012-December-30, 07:32
George Carlin
#4
Posted 2012-December-30, 07:35
#5
Posted 2012-December-30, 07:40
dwar0123, on 2012-December-30, 07:35, said:
I understood the first time but I still don't understand why it is you are this sure about this. Why can't it be that someone sees everything upside down, simply relating (our) up to (his) down? The 'up' of proprioception to the 'down' of sight?
George Carlin
#6
Posted 2012-December-30, 09:29
http://www.newscient.../eye-level.html
[EDIT] - sorry I see that the inital link considers this.
That being the case, I don't really understand the question.
All that the eye does is take an image and convert it into an electrical signal. Why should it matter what way up the image comes in? The signal just gets compiled like any computer program.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#7
Posted 2012-December-30, 10:14
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2012-December-30, 11:54
Experience is the key, I read that (people living on the pole) have 27 or so scales of white, you first name it, then you learn to recognice and differentiate it from similar ones.
#9
Posted 2012-December-30, 12:05
And as pointed out from that experiment, it can even unlearn the original orientation and learn a new one in a matter of days.
#10
Posted 2012-December-30, 15:17
Gwnn is my favorite poster
- billw55
#11
Posted 2012-December-30, 20:53
btw I read somewhere that for most of human life we did not have names or understand different colors.
think about that for human history we did not know most colors.
I should try and find some references that explains this better.
edit:
Benoit Mandelbrot discovered what is now called the M-Set in the early seventies and coined the term ... The Colors of Infinity
This may not be the most clear.....but at least a start.
#13
Posted 2013-January-14, 11:11
WellSpyder, on 2013-January-14, 09:56, said:
This reminds me of a hand at the club Christmas party once -- after the auction, the rank of the cards changed. To alphabetical order. It was a real challenge figuring out who'd won a given trick.
#15
Posted 2013-March-05, 08:58
mike777, on 2012-December-30, 20:53, said:
Take a look at some old episodes of QI (or buy the book). One of the "quite interesting" tidbits is that the ancient Greeks described the colour of the sky was the same as the metal bronze (colour was more like we would call tone). It also explains that colours are added to almost every language in the same order, although I cannot remember what the order actually is. Some lesser developed languages are missing colours that most cultures would take for granted.
#16
Posted 2013-March-05, 09:11
The thing that's relevant to this thread is that a few episodes ago, the deaf girl made an intentional pun when talking to a deaf friend. And last night, a bunch of deaf students were rapping, with lines that rhymed. I wondered how deaf people would know about auditory puns and rhymes. They can recognize the cases where the words (or final syllables) have the same spelling, but would they see that "tough" and "buff" rhyme? The lead dead girl has learned to speak, so I suppose she would, but many of the other deaf characters only seem to sign.
They were also putting on a performance of Romeo and Juliet in ASL. When the characters are signing, the show puts up subtitles with translations, and they used the archaic English style of Shakespeare. Does ASL actually have words for "thee" and "thou", which fell into disuse long before ASL was developed? I wonder if they were spelling all these old fashioned words out.
#17
Posted 2013-March-05, 13:56
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#19
Posted 2013-March-06, 05:31
blackshoe, on 2013-March-05, 13:56, said:
I know that it does, although I assumed that it's only used sparingly, as a last resort. With all the archaic language in a Shakespeare play, it seems like it would drown in it, and obscure the poetry of the language. Does anyone know if ASL has a sign for "wherefore"? Or did she simply use the sign for "why" (thus avoiding the common misunderstanding that many modern people have about the most famous line in the play)?
I suppose it's not much different from translating Shakespeare into other languages. When his plays are performed in other languages, do the translators deliberately use old forms of the language, to give the same sense that it's from another period?