99 percent of what you see is not what comes in through the eyes. It is what you infer about that room.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I seriously object to seeing on the screen what belongs in the bedroom.
For an object under the eye will appear very different from the same object placed above it; in an inclosed space, very different from the same in an open space.
It seems like everything that we see perceived in the brain before we actually use our own eyes, that everything we see is coming through computers or machines and then is being input in our brain cells. So that really worries me.
When I take a picture I take 10 percent of what I see.
I think most people try to get others to see through their eyes.
While there is perhaps a province in which the photograph can tell us nothing more than what we see with our own eyes, there is another in which it proves to us how little our eyes permit us to see.
Perceive that which cannot be seen with the eye.
I'm trying to do what I have never done - give the impression one has on entering a room: one sees everything and at the same time nothing.
I'm a visual thinker. Research tells us that only 20 per cent of people think visually. So what about the other 80 per cent? Don't they think in pictures? I mean if you imagine washing and preparing potatoes you visualise the process, right?
You can tell everything from the eyes.
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