ChatterBank1 min ago
Infinite optical loop
16 Answers
If one were to somehow enable one of one's eyes to look into the other directly, what would happen? Would your head explode? Would it be like the trippy bit in Jacob's Ladder?
Which eye would you see?
Which eye would you see?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Scubapig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The optic nerve is quite stretchy so it's an easy experiment to set up: pluck one orb out, tug on the nerves (being careful not to sever them completely) and point the dangly eye at the still-socketed one.
In the same way seeing yourself in the mirror doesn't fling you into a Dali-esque nightmare, the results will be disappointing: a blurry smudge of similar, but different, images.
Try crossing your eyes and looking at your nose instead. Same effect; less blood on your shoes.
In the same way seeing yourself in the mirror doesn't fling you into a Dali-esque nightmare, the results will be disappointing: a blurry smudge of similar, but different, images.
Try crossing your eyes and looking at your nose instead. Same effect; less blood on your shoes.
I'm going to try making my own 'eye looping' device with a length of flexible tubing, such as you might find on a vacuum cleaner, and some pieces of broken mirror I found down the back of the sofa. I'll Blutack them to the inside at various angles, creating a kind of '180 degree periscope'.
Should be at work though, really.
Should be at work though, really.
It's quite an interesting question but I suspect mikko has already given the correct answer.
I know what you're saying though Scubapig - when our brain perceives sensory information as conflicting it will "explode", and here's another experiment for you just to prove that point (and less blood on your shoes too lol mikko):
Place your middle finger over your index finger so that they form a cross. Place your nose inside the V-space which is formed between the tips of these two fingers (oh and leave your nose on your face I might add, no need to pull it off for this experiment, just bring your fingers up to where your nose is;-)
Now, slide your crossed fingers up and down the bridge of your nose, with your nose inside the angle that is formed by the tips of your fingers. How many noses can you feel? Spooky, huh.
I know what you're saying though Scubapig - when our brain perceives sensory information as conflicting it will "explode", and here's another experiment for you just to prove that point (and less blood on your shoes too lol mikko):
Place your middle finger over your index finger so that they form a cross. Place your nose inside the V-space which is formed between the tips of these two fingers (oh and leave your nose on your face I might add, no need to pull it off for this experiment, just bring your fingers up to where your nose is;-)
Now, slide your crossed fingers up and down the bridge of your nose, with your nose inside the angle that is formed by the tips of your fingers. How many noses can you feel? Spooky, huh.
(SPOILER: I suppose the middle finger "thinks" that everything it feels on its right side (provided you use your right hand) is in fact located to its right side, whereas the index finger "thinks" that anything it feels to its left is in fact located to its left - which, in the normal experience of a hand, would imply two different objects.)
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