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To: Mrs. Don-o
Hi! At first I thought I was seeing things, but when I looked, it was a dot. If you started a post and didn't complete it, I for one would like to hear what you have to say!

That little dot said something, though. We all start out tinier than that dot! God breathes life into us, and gives us an immortal soul that His Only Son gave up His Life to save.

Our society says that little dot doesn't matter. We know better. Any human life, whether tiny; different in how God made them; older, wise and wrinkled; or approaching the time when God calls that soul home, it is a sacred gift of God!

God bless you-and thanks for the food for thought... You post well, even when you don't try! : )

14 posted on 12/17/2014 5:55:33 PM PST by Grateful2God (preastat fides supplementum sensuum defectui)
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To: Grateful2God
Grateful2God --- and Grateful2U!

You said it all!

I love your tagline, by the way. That's the very line of the Tantum Ergo I love the best. Especially the two words "sensuum defectui" --- when the senses fail.

A little off-subject, but at the same time right on it: an amazing and humbling demonstration of how the senses fail. This is an optical illusion I found on Discoverymagazine:

And here's their explanation:

Blue green spiral illusion You see embedded spirals, right, of green, pinkish-orange, and blue? Incredibly, the green and the blue spirals are the same color. Huh?

I loaded the image in Photoshop and examined the two spirals. In the two squares displayed below, the one on the left is colored using the same color from the blue spiral, and on the right using the green spiral.


...........green and blue squares..

Like I said, incredible! For pedantry sake, the RGB colors in both spirals are 0, 255, 150. So they are mostly green with a solid splash of blue.

The reason they look different colors is because our brain judges the color of an object by comparing it to surrounding colors. In this case, the stripes are not continuous as they appear at first glance. The orange stripes don’t go through the "blue" spiral, and the magenta ones don’t go through the "green" one. Here’s a zoom to make this more clear:


Blue green spirals zoom

See? The orange stripes go through the "green" spiral but not the "blue" one. So without us even knowing it, our brains compare that spiral to the orange stripes, forcing it to think the spiral is green. The magenta stripes make the other part of the spiral look blue, even though they are exactly the same color. If you still don’t believe me, concentrate on the edges of the colored spirals. Where the green hits the magenta it looks bluer to me, and where the blue hits the orange it looks greener. Amazing.

The overall pattern is a spiral shape because our brain likes to fill in missing bits to a pattern. Even though the stripes are not the same color all the way around the spiral , the overlapping spirals makes our brain think they are. The very fact that you have to examine the picture closely to figure out any of this at all shows just how easily we can be fooled.

This is why I tell people over and over again: you cannot trust what you see even with your own eyes. Your eyes are not cameras faithfully taking pictures of absolute truth of all that surrounds you. They have filters, and your brain has to interpret the jangled mess it gets fed. Colors are not what they appear, shapes are not what they appear (that zoomed image above is square, believe it or not), objects are not what they appear.

Things are not as they appear!

And that related to my tagline...

20 posted on 12/18/2014 5:09:47 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (O Mary, He whom the whole Universe cannot contain, enclosed Himself in your womb and was made man.)
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