‘I’m afraid of losing my obscurity. Genuineness only thrives in the dark. Like celery.’ –Aldous Huxley

443.jpg

Our eyes jump rapidly about three times each second to capture new visual information, and with each jump a new view of the world falls onto the retina — a layer of visual receptors on the back of the eye.

However, we do not experience this jerky sequence of images; rather, we see a stable world.

{ ScienceDaily | Continue reading }