THANK YOU for the CLARIFYING QUESTION. They are MUCH APPRECIATED, but VERY RARELY RECEIVED.bahman wrote: ↑Sat Nov 27, 2021 6:36 pmHow does the brain work?Age wrote: ↑Sat Nov 27, 2021 7:02 amWhat are you saying, "No" to, EXACTLY HERE?
Also, what do you mean by the words, "your brain is fast enough to create an illusion of continuous motion depending on the frame rate you perceive"?
What does "your brain is fast enough" even mean or refer to, EXACTLY?
What you may find is if one sees a continuous motion picture, or not, (that is a still picture) is all dependent upon how fast a projection film is being presented onto a screen, in front of you. Which REALLY does NOT have much AT ALL in regards to "how fast brains are" or not are.But I do NOT observe discrete motion when the frame rate of a 'projected' 'motion film' is "small" or slowed down.
What I observe is STILL a 'continuous image' but this time of what looks more like the 'motion picture film' when it is NOT on a 'projection apparatus' being presented to me on a 'movie screen'. No matter the speed of the frame rate, which is being presented to me, what I observe is 'continuous'. And, it does NOT matter if the rate is sped up or slowed down what is SEEN is 'continuous', well to me anyway.
What you observe and experience "bahman" may be completely and utterly DIFFERENT.LOL I DO.
The human brain works by obtaining, and withholding, some of the information sent to it, from the five senses of that human body, which the brain is within.
It could be said that the human brain works just like a computer does. As the human brain can only put out information, which has been fed into it.
And, while 'I' leave 'you' to make ASSUMPTIONS or not on what this ACTUALLY MEANS, 'I' will leave you, again, with the suggestion that it is ALWAYS better to GAIN CLARITY, FIRST, BEFORE one EVER MAKES ANY ASSUMPTION AT ALL. This is because CLARITY can NEVER be Wrong, whereas ASSUMPTIONS can ALWAYS be Wrong.