tyler.durden
Well-Known Member
That Wiseman study is interesting! I'm going to pass this along to my tip jar friends, as well. The video you posted is one I've seen before at an Atheist Convention at Cal Tech, although it was children passing a ball and a gorilla walking into the middle and waving. It's our favorite example of the pitfalls of human perception. They showed several examples of the foibles and quirks of human perception, and I was blown away by my missing almost everything. Since then, I've realized my feeling of certainty does not necessarily mean what I'm certain of is true, and that I must always be applying doubt to my thinking process. It sometimes feels like a lot of workI enjoyed the exchange. I apologize for not being able to link to the study I mentioned. It is documented by Richard Wiseman in his book quirkology. His website lists this study involving charity boxes which you also might find interesting.
I often talk about human perception being prone to mistakes, and how it's important to consider this when judging evidence and beliefs. Richard's work provided us with a great video to demonstrate one of these mistakes.
[video=youtube;UfA3ivLK_tE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UfA3ivLK_tE[/video]
Here's another cool example of the fallibility of the mind, a phenomenon called 'Change Blindness' (Sorry, I don't know how to imbed the YouTube screen here):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkrrVozZR2c