Monks See Through Optical Illusion Games 63
FhnuZoag writes "Nature is reporting that Buddhist monks, highly trained in meditation, were better able to maintain focus in a set of computer generated illusions designed to confuse the brain. The particular illusions involved showing different images to each eye, and maintaining a state of motion-induced blindness. This may be scientific proof of the efficacy of meditative study. The full, original article may be downloaded here. (500 KB PDF)"
This is priceless... (Score:4, Funny)
From TFA:
What the hell? Who wrote this article, Jeff K.?
d00d, this iz teh ghey.
Re:This is priceless... (Score:2)
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Alternatively, we can increase the duration of the disappearance by disrupting teh activity of the Right hemsiphere with precisely time pulses (the Right hemisphere seems to be much more picky about the prcise timing of teh TMS pulse thanthe Left, perhasp associated with the large blocks of time that the Left deals in ).
What the hell? Who wrote this article, Jeff K.?
d00d, this iz teh ghey.
My wife worked in the English Lab at University of Houston Clear Lake and she saw many of the foreign
Sign me up for the monastery (Score:1)
I stare at a frame of reference in the image. I've tried each dot, the center of the image, and the corners of the image.
Since I'm definately not a monk, I'm sure that others must be experiencing this symptom as well.
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
You have to hold your head really really still.
Perhaps monks, due to all their training, blink a lot?
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Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
Daniel
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:1)
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder why this
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
The blind spots are interesting on their own... you can make your thumb disappear if you hold it our to your right. The blind spot in the middle of the eye is only at night, sin
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:1)
You must be a PC gamer... Strong is the Force in you. I didn't have any problem at all keeping all three dots in my vision either when focusing on one of them. Is this some kind of joke?
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:1)
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
your eye is twitching around a lot. the monk can cause his eye to *not* twitch.
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
I wonder if this damanges anything though. After doing it for a couple minutes, when I stopped it was like someone had taken my picture with a flash or something. Even as I type this the visual residue is still there.
Re:Sign me up for the monastery (Score:2)
That's not surprising (Score:2)
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Re:That's not surprising (Score:2)
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Re:That's not surprising (Score:1, Interesting)
Yes, ignorant Westerners do tend to idolize Buddhism that way.
Where is the "intellectual" side to the several Buddhist hells where the wicked are tormented eternally? Where is the "intellectual" side to the hungry ghosts? Where is the "intellectual" side to stories of the Buddha's miracles, which are suspiciously similar to the stories you presumably reject of Jesus' and Mohammed's?
Where is the "inte
Re:That's not surprising (Score:1)
These are what Buddhist teachers call "skillful means".
They are not core Buddhist teachings, they are shiny candy coatings (and you will find noted Buddhist teachers, especially in the Zen traditions, who explictly confirm this) introduced in the Mahayana traditions to help ignorant and superstitious people swallow the "medicine" of Buddhist
Re:That's not surprising (Score:2)
I don't believe any chanting or praying will earn some sort of salvation. But I do believe that Buddhism teaches salvation and happiness come from within. I find that to be psychologically sound.
Re:That's not surprising (Score:2)
Where is the "intellectual" side to the several Buddhist hells where the wicked are tormented eternally? Where is the "intellectual" side to the hungry ghosts? Where is the "intellectual" side to stories of the Buddha's miracles, which are suspiciously similar to the stories you presumably reject of Jesus' and Mohammed's?
Where is the "intellectual" side to a religion that, in its most popular form in Japan, states that it doesn't matter what
Re:That's not surprising (Score:1)
Not sure what this means (Score:2)
Re:Not sure what this means (Score:1)
BTW, your sig is great.
efficacy (Score:1, Offtopic)
I thought "efficacy" was related to the root "effective", but apparently it's a sibling to Papacy.
Re:efficacy (Score:1)
Re:efficacy (Score:1)
Zen is denial? (Score:3, Funny)
Master: One eye sees truth, one eye sees falsehood.
Student: Which eye is correct?
Master: Neither.
Monkeys see through optical illusion games (Score:1)
How do they know what the monks saw? (Score:3, Funny)
Haiku! (Score:2)
Meditating (Score:2, Interesting)
The way it was explained to me, the mind is afraid it will cease to exist if it is not involved in constant thought or self-conversation.
Meditation
Re:Meditating (Score:1)
It's probably best to do a little research on your particular illness/disorder. I wouldn't just say that anyone with a family history of any mental illness should completely stay clear. Just because your Aunt Tilly has epilepsy is no reason for you to miss the benifits of meditation if you've never h
Re:Meditating (Score:2)
Thinking changes perception? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been doing Buddhist practices for damn near 40 years now, and I've noticed it anecdotally: a lot of visual illusions don't seem to work any longer. Now, it's hard to separate that out from being, well, old (remember how as a kid it looked for all the world like the moon was racing along with your car when Mom and Dad drove you somewhere at night?) and perceptual psych is way down the list of things I want to do in my spare time, but it seems completely plausible to me that monks who spend lots more time in these practices than I do would show these effects very strongly.
Exceeding focus of thought is required to write a sentence like that one, I hope you know.
Re:Thinking changes perception? (Score:2)
Journey to West (Score:2)
I am unsure as to why meditation, per se, would help at all with optical illusions. TM alters the brain chemistry, to a degree, but in ways
Re:Journey to West (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, it's not that Buddhists distrust the sense themseves: they distrust thoughts about the senses. Those thoughts then can modify the way you perceive the sensory data --- consider watching someone eat, with evident enjoyment, a dark brown semi-liquid substance with a spoon. Your perception of it, down to visceral reactions, is wildly different if you think it's chocolate ice cream or dog poop.
Re:Journey to West (Score:2)
efficacy? (Score:3)
Page Not Found (Score:1)
After opening the page in a background tab (Firefox), I glanced to see it reporting 404. Dang, I thought,
(title)404 Not Found(/title)
Monk? (Score:1)
I can maintain the illusion - or the lack of illusion - as long as I want.
So am I a zen master yet? (-;
Now seriously, try this kind of test as part of a videogame and see how good gaming geeks do. Especially if they don't know which part of the game is testing them!