feywon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Rural North Central NM
Thing is, a great deal of what our senses perceive does not make it into our conscious waking mind. It sometimes surfaces in dreams or as intuition, instincts such as feeling someone is untrustworthy.I used to think that reality is pretty much cut & dried, and that only our perceptions of a finite reality is what differs. Hmmm, as I type this I realize that I still feel that's true.
From a physiological standpoint, what we experience as reality is determined by what's going on in the synaptic cleft, where neurotransmitters influence our sensory inputs. Here is one of many articles that describe the processes taking place in our nervous system: https://www.verywellmind.com/what-is-a-neurotransmitter-2795394
I suspect it is a key factor in the adaptive unconscious. Those 'hunches' that get confirmed--because some bits of info that our senses perceived but never made it to mind conscious gave us clues that we formed the seemingly random opinion on.
BTW i think neuroscientists arrived at the notion of our mind filtering out a great deal of info when trying to figure out why eyewitness testimony is generally unreliable. Using inanimate sight/sound recorders to capture all of what present and comparing it to what people observed/heard in a clip.
Pareidolia is a caused by our pattern recognition function working, usually unnecessarily, overtime. My experience with my eye disease until i had my surgery made it clear our brains, are constantly trying to make sense of our sensory input and sometimes will draw ridiculous conclusions based on minimal info.
Plus i've seen demonstrations that prove prejudices can actually alter facts about what someone has seen within their mind. So i'm not as impressed with human ability to accurately percieve things thru physical senses as some are.
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