Whatever your answer is to the question on the title, are you sure? After you watch the next video, please tell me how you see color?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mf5otGNbkuc
Whatever your answer is to the question on the title, are you sure? After you watch the next video, please tell me how you see color?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mf5otGNbkuc
"I have never in my life made music for money or fame. God walks out of the room when you are thinking about money." -- Quincy Jones
Watch episode 1: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...5FXPGXE5R27J4T
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
Peter, that is amazing video. It reinforces my question even more. The prism experiments is the perfect way to explain why we as LF photographers get used to see the image inverted on the ground glass. At the beginning is hard, but intuitively we get it later on.
"I have never in my life made music for money or fame. God walks out of the room when you are thinking about money." -- Quincy Jones
I thought the same thing when I saw it. Our sensory experience, which is experience of something called the perceptual model, is a creation of our brains. It doesn't exist out there independent of us. Basically, Kant was right.
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
That explains why two photographers taken the "same" picture from the same place get different results. Our realities are different.
"I have never in my life made music for money or fame. God walks out of the room when you are thinking about money." -- Quincy Jones
Perhaps it's reality that is the same, and its our individual perception of that reality that differs.
Our realities are made up by our brain. Since the camera does not capture our reality, it captures what is reflected onto them, we get some surprises many times. We expect the camera to capture our realities, and they don't do it.
"I have never in my life made music for money or fame. God walks out of the room when you are thinking about money." -- Quincy Jones
The film's got it "right". Our brain gets it differently.
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