3 Comments

Interesting how memory affects reality

I came across this:

And my first reaction was:

Uh… well, that’s good, because I don’t see any red.

Even having read the prompt first, at first I did not see any red at all. It’s only when I moved the image further away from me, that I could begin to hallucinate a red colour on the can.

I am theorising that aspie brains may be less susceptible to such things as we may be a little more literal and objective in our perception of reality; which is why I say that a slight level of autism is the next step in human evolution. As long as it’s tinged with a sufficiently high IQ and is not straying into actually autistic territory.

It also explains why eyewitness testimony on what clothes a person was wearing or what colour a car was vary so much. And why people are so resistant to change their opinions no matter how thoroughly they may be proved wrong.

    3 Responses to “Interesting how memory affects reality”

    1. A says:

      I saw it as red. Fascinating.

      I think I’ll start praying this once daily: “Lord, please give me the humility to know when I am being an idiot and/or need to change my mind.”

    2. Anthony Probst says:

      Funny, I saw the red at first, but it disappeared when I enlarged the page. Amazing optical illusion. I wonder if I would have seen red if the can were not labeled with the word “Coca.”

      Now that I look at it, I no longer see the color except when I scroll it up or down. Once motionless it’s black & white again. Weird.

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