A stock example is a straight stick appearing to be bent when half-immersed in water. So in that state, it appears to be bent, but when you take it out of the water, it isn't bent. — Wayfarer
The trouble with this idea is that, thanks to modern physics, we already know what makes things transparent. Depending on the grain pattern of a substance, light may or may not be absorbed. That's what transparency is - something going through another thing without much friction.
So your theory becomes irrelevant because in this case, empirical evidence trumps a priori speculation. — darthbarracuda
Why do you think this? Are you unfamiliar with any of the physics facts of life that darthbarracuda pointed out? — Bitter Crank
What you are seeing is a stream of light from the sun, bouncing off objects, and (some of it) continuing on to be absorbed at last by the cones and rods in your retina, blah blah blah. — Bitter Crank
↪dukkha Because that's what it means to be see-through: photons are able to pass through the material. — darthbarracuda
↪dukkha You need to realize that when we perceive anything, it's really just the reflection of photons traveling through a transparent gas or space. — darthbarracuda
My way of understanding this illusion is that 'see-through' things (eg, water, glasses, glass, plastic, quartz, etc) are not actually see-through. Rather they display what's behind them on their surfaces, — dukkha
we make the mistake of thinking we're seeing the actual thing beyond/behind the surface — dukkha
Yeah, which is called "see-through" or "transparent." Apparently you came to the conclusion that "see-through" or "transparent" implied "literally invisible," but why you would have come to that conclusion is rather the mystery. — Terrapin Station
But you are seeing the actual thing behind the surface. — Terrapin Station
So then you agree with me that clear things aren't see through? — dukkha
you've made another argument which doesn't make any sense. — dukkha
What the science blogger says is this: A light wave passing through glass is absorbed and re-emitted as it passes through the substance. — Bitter Crank
No one is arguing that the stick literally touches your eye or that the same lightwaves/photons that touched the stick also touch your eyes. (Even though the latter isn't precluded.) That's not what anyone is saying by "seeing the stick in the water." — Terrapin Station
According to what Bittercrank wrote though, it is not the same "lightwaves/photons" that touch the stick as which touch your eyes. — Metaphysician Undercover
The ones that leave the stick get absorbed into the water. Then the water releases new ones. — Metaphysician Undercover
When I look out the window, the sky is blue because between me and the upper atmosphere there IS enough gas to refract light waves. — Bitter Crank
are the exact same ones that hit our retinas and we do see the stick. — Barry Etheridge
So to spell it out, if this is the same as how we see glass, when we look at glass we are looking at a flat surface but are experiencing an illusion of depth beyond the glass. Or when we look at glass are the things we see not an illusion od depth, but actual depth as in it is the objects beyond the pane of glass which are being internally represented by the brain. — dukkha
Because it's not the actual physical object beyond the brain which we are directly looking at (as if our eyes are windows upon the world which we look 'through', but rather an internal visual perception - a representation of those (hypothesised) physical objects, then within the context of this thread we OUGHT have no problems with discussing the phenomenology of the physical brains internally generated visual perception. — dukkha
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