sprinkles
Well-known member
- MBTI
- xxxx
Why does the brain make such erroneous assumptions?
Take for example the Necker Cube. Most people perceive this as a 3D cube, usually favoring one perspective of 3D, or flipping between two perspectives.
However, perceiving it as any kind of 3D is a mistake, because if it were meant to represent 3D, the back face would appear smaller, and the four horizontal edges would not be drawn as parallel. Yet, brains continue to perceive it as 3D even when they know this (like mine).
Why is this? Maybe the idealization of an object causes the brain to reject perspective illusions. Maybe the brain knows that when you look at a real 3D cube, the back face is not actually smaller, it just looks smaller. In fact this is what a 3D cube can look like in 3D programs that allow you to turn off perspective, but the brain seems to fail to recognize that seeing a 3D cube without perspective warping shouldn't be the case.
It's like the opposite of seeing a mirage. Your brain is convinced that it sees something, you can immediately recognize it as an illusion, but the illusion is actually present. There's really light bouncing to you from a place where it normally wouldn't, which is why you see it in the first place, and in the case of seeing objects such as a ship on the horizon, there actually is a ship somewhere and atmospheric effects are carrying the light from it further than usual. It's just not located where you're seeing it.
Take for example the Necker Cube. Most people perceive this as a 3D cube, usually favoring one perspective of 3D, or flipping between two perspectives.

However, perceiving it as any kind of 3D is a mistake, because if it were meant to represent 3D, the back face would appear smaller, and the four horizontal edges would not be drawn as parallel. Yet, brains continue to perceive it as 3D even when they know this (like mine).
Why is this? Maybe the idealization of an object causes the brain to reject perspective illusions. Maybe the brain knows that when you look at a real 3D cube, the back face is not actually smaller, it just looks smaller. In fact this is what a 3D cube can look like in 3D programs that allow you to turn off perspective, but the brain seems to fail to recognize that seeing a 3D cube without perspective warping shouldn't be the case.
It's like the opposite of seeing a mirage. Your brain is convinced that it sees something, you can immediately recognize it as an illusion, but the illusion is actually present. There's really light bouncing to you from a place where it normally wouldn't, which is why you see it in the first place, and in the case of seeing objects such as a ship on the horizon, there actually is a ship somewhere and atmospheric effects are carrying the light from it further than usual. It's just not located where you're seeing it.