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- neilderosa
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Fred (and you) were invited more than once to make a scientific case. Fred opted instead to try to sell pictures and to talk of solipsism. You continued on unfazed, as if nothing had happened.
I say the picture you just posted is art (and not even very good art at that). Nothing more and nothing less. By the by, you (or anyone) can make them with your "cloning tool." It's easy. I made a bunch already, but I didn't post them for the obvious reason.
I have a suggestion for the moderators. You are right. This is getting tiresome. Why don't you allow any interested parties to make one more "closing statement." And then end the subject. Like in a formal debate???
Neil
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<br />
Let me pose a logical question. Assume for the sake of argument (logical argument, that is) that all of Fred's photos are what we say they are. Then what? [rd]<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">I take it you're choosing to sidestep this question. My question wasn't intended for you to repeat your point of view again, I was asking you to assume his photo is what it's supposed to be, and then what. But, I can understand how you might not want to commit. There are alot of mud-pies at stake.
Good job on learning how to use the "clone tool", though. Welcome to the 90s.
rd
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- tvanflandern
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<br /><blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by tvanflandern</i>
<br />I would agree if this were not a null set. Did I miss something?<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">I'm talking about holes and lines in the rocks that look like a face but are not man/Martian made. You could walk right up to it, touch it, whatever, and it still looks like a face. Why would you think this is a null set? I posted a whole rock pile of them from a picture I took at Mt. Ranier once. They're all over the walls of Yosemite, and I would imagine Mars.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Neither of us is understanding the other, and I don't know why. Your reply makes no sense to me as a response to my question. Where is the change of viewing orientation or lighting orientation over a broad range in the examples you just cited, or in any other example of known pareidolia? Or is there something unclear about the meaning of this criterion?
The whole point is that face illusions made of shadows in natural terrain disappear when the direction of the light source changes because that changes the shadows. And faces made from piecing together random natural shapes in busy terrain also disappear when one views them from a different direction and sees the pieces in a different order or relationship, and sometimes sees new pieces or can no longer see others. Only 3-D faces such as Mt. Rushmore or the Sphinx can survive this test because the facial features were sculpted in 3-D with the proper relationships and therefore look the face-like with any lighting or viewing angle. Face illusions apparently cannot survive this test. -|Tom|-
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<br />Neither of us is understanding the other, and I don't know why. Your reply makes no sense to me as a response to my question. Where is the change of viewing orientation or lighting orientation over a broad range in the examples you just cited, or in any other example of known pareidolia? Or is there something unclear about the meaning of this criterion?<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Yes, you've got me confused again on this. We do seem to be talking past each other. I think I've argued this point many times, but you don't seem to want to accept it. I'm not saying you don't necessarily understand what I'm saying, at this point I'm thinking you do, and you disagree with me, but let me nail down what I think is the one single idea we disagree on. It has to do with this quote of yours:
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">The whole point is that <b>face illusions </b> made of shadows in natural terrain disappear when the direction of the light source changes because that changes the shadows. <b>And faces made from piecing together random natural shapes in busy terrain also disappear</b> when one views them from a different direction and sees the pieces in a different order or relationship, and sometimes sees new pieces or can no longer see others.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">I highlighted two phrases. I agree with both of your assertions. However, what I don't agree with is that there is <b>no</b> case where viewing from different direction or light coming from different direction eliminates all possible examples of pareidolia. It's as simple as that.
Sure, in much of what we're dealing with, that's true, but there are other cases involving observations from close up and various directions, under varying lighting angles, where it's <b>not true</b>. Also, what if you don't have a whole bunch of angles and lighting to work with, then what?
For instance, suppose one sunny day, I went to Yosemite with a small jack hammer, chisel and hammer, and a small stool. I go to one of the walls, and carve out a head and face feature about the size of a small wall in your house. I'm not a very good artist, so it would be relatively crude. But, I have good enough technique with a hammer and chisel that I can make the eyes, nose mouth, hair, outline of head, in such a way that it sort of looks like natural breaks in the rock, not necessarily "brush strokes" looking. But, crude as it may be, it is most definitely appearing like a head and face.
Ok, the next day, I take you to that spot and show it to you from about 5 to 10 feet away. Maybe we go in the after noon, rather than the morning so the sun is at a completely different angle. We walk all the way in a 180 degree from the wall out and around to the other side of the face, from anywhere from 5 to 25 feet away at any time.
All I'm saying is that in this case it doesn't necessarily disappear at anytime, anymore than we disappear when someone looks at us from different angles and lighting, and there's no way for you to be sure if that face is pareidolic in nature, or man made, unless you can find corroborating evidence.
It seems like you don't want to accept that part of the definition of pareidolia, although I could be misreading it. In this case (to you as viewer at the wall in Yosemite) "pareidolia" just means non-man made vs. man made. You would be seeing it all the time, you just wouldn't know if it was pareidolia or not. I would obviously because I made it, but that's a whole different issue.
In this example, there are no shadows or illusions or noisy background involved at all, just "man-made" or "not man made" (i.e., pareidolic).
rd
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- Larry Burford
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??? !!!
Of course not. It's a man made 3D face, despite the attempts to disguize it. Anyone would instantly suspect this.
That is the point Tom is trying to make.
LB
(Or am I missing something here? )
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<br />It's a man made 3D face, despite the attempts to disguize it.....(Or am I missing something here? )<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Man, you guys are tough audience. Assume for a minute that <b>you couldn't tell that someone did it.</b>
Ok, let me give you a variant. Tom has said many times that there's no level of detail that couldn't have happened by chance. Right? Ok, suppose instead of the example I just gave, suppose some chance rocks and sticks accomplished the same thing, made a face looking feature that didn't disappear on different viewing and lighting angles and wasn't in a noisy background, and no shadows involved.
Imagine that case, and then tell me what you think.
rd
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