<strong>[ Science -> Article ]</strong>
Just stumbled upon an article written last year about the topic of the time delay between occurrence and perception. I'd heard of it before but this is a pretty interesting read. A reference to The Road makes it that much sweeter.
<blockquote><p><em>When light strikes your eyes, it takes some hundreds of milliseconds before you become conscious of the event. As a consequence, you are always living in the past. This strange fact of our existence is well known is neuroscience, but there’s an interesting, underappreciated consequence: you may not ever become aware of the thing that kills you.
Cormac McCarthy addresses this point in his post-apocalyptic novel The Road, in a scene in which the main character has his pistol leveled on a miscreant. The malefactor challenges: “you won't shoot....they [my companions] will hear the shot.�
The protagonist replies, “Yes they will. But you won’t.�
“How do you figure that?�
“Because the bullet travels faster than sound. It will be in your brain before you can hear it. To hear it you will need a frontal lobe and things with names like colliculus and temporal gyrus and you won't have them anymore. They’ll just be soup.�</em></p></blockquote>The article continues here.
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Will you perceive the event that kills you?
- St. Toxic
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Some forms of autism can make a person wholly perceptive of the direct future (or perhaps, actual present). Though there's little to be gained from it, as it simply leads up to general desynchronization and, from what I've gathered, the information thus being collected rapidly or even ahead of time mainly ends up as jumbled garbage.
So, the next time you see a drooling retard going derp derp at the supermarket, give him a full DAC salute, as he may well end up being the John Conner of a pre-cog batallion, fighting in a global war against the self-replicating machines.
So, the next time you see a drooling retard going derp derp at the supermarket, give him a full DAC salute, as he may well end up being the John Conner of a pre-cog batallion, fighting in a global war against the self-replicating machines.
You inspired me to do a little search.St. Toxic wrote:Some forms of autism can make a person wholly perceptive of the direct future (or perhaps, actual present). Though there's little to be gained from it, as it simply leads up to general desynchronization and, from what I've gathered, the information thus being collected rapidly or even ahead of time mainly ends up as jumbled garbage.
So, the next time you see a drooling retard going derp derp at the supermarket, give him a full DAC salute, as he may well end up being the John Conner of a pre-cog batallion, fighting in a global war against the self-replicating machines.
(I was reminded of an article in Popular Science a few months ago where the researchers were trying to find out about "time accelleration" during stressful experiences. Like how your brain seems to speed up as a car accident happens. There was a part about how maybe the "internal monologue" might be desynched in schizophrenia.)
First try
With an extra word
Three
Four
I'm just browsing through this stuff, not seriously attempting to digest it.
Kinda interesting.
Reminds me of the Dual Brain mutation in Gamma World.