HIST10014 Lecture Notes - Lecture 21: David Hockney, Duke Ellington, Richard Feynman
Document Summary
When the cues we get visually and cues we get audibly don"t match up. If the audio is the same for two di erent visual stimulus, what you hear may be di erent. Therefore what we hear may not always be the truth. Example of how we take many fragments of information and how we turn it into an experience that we have. We experience a single version of the world but there are many versions of the world. We should be looking for a part of the brain where everything comes together. Not requirement but many people believe it is. Children have more di erences than adults and as they grow up these di erence start to drop away pain as colours, describing temperature as colours, describing numbers as a taste (zero as pen) No one wants synaesthesia to be taken away from them.