In which I write down all those musings of which the world has been horribly deprived until this moment.
(Progressive Politics, Liberal Religion, Sex, and the occasional abnormality that bubbles forth from goodness knows where.)
I love stuff like this. Our brains are not generic input processors. They are optimized for accomplishing certain tasks, and it's amazing what can fall through the cracks.
Anonymous said…
That is some crappy moonwalking!
Anyway, so apparently I'm not self-aware. I may need you to explain to me how mirrors work.
Or maybe I'm not aware as in "Awareness Day." That could be a problem!
Focus someone's attention, and then anything that fall outside of the parameters is likely to go unnoticed.
Passes by the white team? We start to look and the first filter is to ignore the black team--and the "bear" is black, so its actions aren't of interest. We miss a lot--we filter it out.
I wonder how many people would see it if they were looking for passes by the black team.
This is interesting. I already knew what was going to happen even though this was my first time seeing this video. I'd seen another video identical in concept, but recorded at a different time with different people...
Anonymous said…
We certainly do not 'see' everything that is in our visual field. Facinating example of this.
"The brain has evolved meachanisms for combating data overload, allowing large rivers of data to pass along optical and cortical corridors almost entirely unassimilated, and peeling off selected data for a close careful view. In deciding what to focus on, the brain essentially shines a spotlight from place to place, a rapid, sweeping search that takes in maybe 30 or 40 objects per seconds..."
"The brain, it seems, is a master at filing gaps and making do, of compiling a cohesive portrait of reality based on a flickering view."
(NYTimes Science Section, 4/1/08)
Visual artists know that they just have to suggest something and the viewer will fill in the details.
WARNING: Those of you who are accustomed to pithy political remarks here on Internal Monologue should brace yourselves for a major dose of gaming geekitude. Here's a link to one "Jamie R." who does a very snarky close reading of Homer's The Odyssey (HT: Mad Latinist via email). I've only read book 1, but it's pretty funny so far. An excerpt: Tell me, O muse, of that ingenious hero who travelled far and wide after he had sacked the famous town of Troy. Many cities did he visit, and many were the nations with whose manners and customs he was acquainted; moreover he suffered much by sea while trying to save his own life and bring his men safely home; but do what he might he could not save his men… Sooooo, he’s in charge, and everybody dies. Tell me, O muse, of that ingenious hero and his colossal failure. What? … for they perished through their own sheer folly in eating the cattle of the Sun-god Hyperion; so the god prevented them from ever rea...
Short version The lyric is not "Fifty-sixth and Wabasha", it is actually "Fifty-six and Wabasha", referring to the intersection of old Minnesota Highway 56 and Wabasha Street in Saint Paul, Minnesota. If you listen, you can hear Dylan sing "fifty-six", rather than "fifty-sixth", particularly on the take that was released as the B-side to "Duquesne Whistle". Minnesota Highway 56 no longer intersects Wabasha Street, but from 1963 to 1974 it did intersect Wabasha Street, at what is now (in Feb. 2021) the intersection of George Street and Cesar Chavez Street in St. Paul, or possibly South Wabasha & Cesar Chavez. Long Version "Meet Me in the Morning" is the first song on side two of Bob Dylan's celebrated 1975 album Blood on the Tracks. In the opening lines of the song, according to the lyrics on Bob Dylan's official site (https://www.bobdylan.com/songs/meet-me-morning/), the narrator invites the listener to a rendez...
Remember in the movie Adaptation , the main character's brother has this idea for a screenplay called The Three? It's about a detective trying to track down a serial killer before he kills his next victim. Pretty standard, right? The twist is that the detective, serial killer, and victim, are all actually the same person . Whoa, dude. Fight Club 's got nothin' on that one. Well, this isn't quite that weird. But apparently, Utah legal authorities are somewhat perplexed by a situation in which a 13-year-old girl and her 12-year-old boyfriend are both simultaneously the perpetrators and victims of the same crime: having sex with each other (HT: Feministing ): Utah Supreme Court justices acknowledged Tuesday that they were struggling to wrap their minds around the concept that a 13-year-old Ogden girl could be both an offender and a victim for the same act - in this case, having consensual sex with her 12-year-old boyfriend. The girl was put in this odd position be...
Comments
Anyway, so apparently I'm not self-aware. I may need you to explain to me how mirrors work.
Or maybe I'm not aware as in "Awareness Day." That could be a problem!
Focus someone's attention, and then anything that fall outside of the parameters is likely to go unnoticed.
Passes by the white team? We start to look and the first filter is to ignore the black team--and the "bear" is black, so its actions aren't of interest. We miss a lot--we filter it out.
I wonder how many people would see it if they were looking for passes by the black team.
"The brain has evolved meachanisms for combating data overload, allowing large rivers of data to pass along optical and cortical corridors almost entirely unassimilated, and peeling off selected data for a close careful view. In deciding what to focus on, the brain essentially shines a spotlight from place to place, a rapid, sweeping search that takes in maybe 30 or 40 objects per seconds..."
"The brain, it seems, is a master at filing gaps and making do, of compiling a cohesive portrait of reality based on a flickering view."
(NYTimes Science Section, 4/1/08)
Visual artists know that they just have to suggest something and the viewer will fill in the details.