Sky
Das Ding an sich / "A priori"
Buddha
Jack fruit plantling
Multi-coloured lady Beetles / Harmonia axyridis
Sun flowers / ಸೂರ್ಯ ಕಾಂತಿ
Gold.....
Rain
Evening
Contingency of Wealth Production
Lipton Door
Water music
ಅಶ್ವತ್ಥ / अश्वत्थ / Ficus religiosa
Triggering & Executing Emotions
Music
Music
Mess
Meadow
A picture
Window
White skipper
Dragon fly - how do they see the world
Summer morning
A raft
Coffee shop
Flower of Zucchini
OK / Okay
Only the Wind
Words
Noah Webster
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That, at any rate, is the consensus from the Exploratorium in San Francisco, where this picture, originally conceived by E.G. Boring, an American psychologist, is on display. As a rule, it takes a while to switch views. But the effect is dramatic once you do so. (When you are familiar with the picture, it is quite easy to control which one you want to see. Just direct your gaze at the place in the picture where the eye of the desired figure will appear -- then you can spot the whole woman at once) ~ Page 185
The British neuropsychological Richard L. Gregory has spent a lifetime collecting visual illusions like these. For they reveal great deal about our way of seeing. Gregory has formulated his understanding of the illusions thus: Our sight really consists of a hypothesis, an interpretation of the world. We do not see the data in front of our eyes; we see an interpretation. ~ Page 186
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