Twitter | Pretraživanje | |
Joscha Bach
Once you realize that the physical universe and the mental universe don't happen simultaneously, you begin to wonder at which moment in physical time your current experience of the present has been constructed. Do you remember parts of the future because it has already happened?
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se" More
n0wl Ⓥ 3. velj
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
this sounds very like the Madhyamaka School of Nagarjuna in the Tibetan Buddhism
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Joscha Bach 3. velj
Odgovor korisniku/ci @n0wl1
I still consider Buddhism to be a spiritual accident; poor Tibetan farmers did not know what hit them
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
kruasan 24 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
Just because our subjective experience is lagging considerably behind what is actually happening right now does not mean that we are remembering the future. Also, different kinds of stimuli are processed at different speeds, which distorts our perception:
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Joscha Bach 24 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @kruasan1
But I am sometimes remembering the future! Not in ways that allows me to break the bank, but I often know what will happen, which I think implies that my experience is constructed in part after the fact.
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
StrayTaoist 3. velj
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
This (to me at least) has always been key. The concept of time. Ignoring all the symbolic debate, adding time into things seems to be a vastly overlooked area of research. (I fiddle with this both personally and in a work capacity, which means there isn't much prior art to go by)
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
3ॐc³ 24 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
Moments are an abstraction. Time is experiences within experiences. The sense of an experience starting or finishing is aesthetic and contextual. Physics is a horizontal cross section of all experiences...a maximally common/generic skim or graphed view of the Holos.
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
davidgibson 23 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
Deja vu on the millisecond timescale and with a construction hat is asynchronous until the moment of integration into awareness.
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Maurice T. Frank 21 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
That's slightly nauseating to think about especially while checking twitter on a ski lift
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Ashtorak 21 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
Funny. I guess it could happen to parts of our perception as well? So looking at this person over there. Maybe she collapsed already minutes ago, but my mind hasn't processed it yet and is still holding up the usual model?
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Dean S Horak 11 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
The time disparity is rectified in the regions around Broca’s area, which produce the logical narrative we experience. Timings are adjusted so they make sense. An example is when we take our index finger and touch our nose...
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"
Dean S Horak 11 h
Odgovor korisniku/ci @Plinz
... the sense of touch signal from our finger tip takes arrives at our brain much later than the the signal from our nose, thanks to the propagation time. However, this “interpreter” region knows that’s our finger and nose and delays the nose event so experience is simultaneous.
Reply Retweet Označi sa "sviđa mi se"