Like a Drawing on a Ball
Think of a ball that’s covered in stickers. When you look at it from one side, you might see a red sticker and a blue sticker next to each other. But if you turn the ball around, you realize they’re actually on opposite sides, not next to each other at all! So what you see is just a clue about where things really are.
The Real Game
Now picture this: You're playing a game with hidden treasures. You can only see clues (like colors or shapes), but the real treasure isn’t there yet. It’s like guessing which toy is under the blanket, you don’t know for sure until you lift it up.
That's what Donald Hoffman means when he says nothing you see is really real, your brain sees just a hint, and the real world is something deeper that we can figure out later! Imagine you're playing a game where everything you see is just a hint, not the real thing. That's what Donald Hoffman is saying in his work about how nothing you see is really real.
Examples
- You think you're looking at an orange tree, but maybe it’s just a clever illusion.
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See also
- How Does a Platonic Ideal Shape Our Understanding of Reality?
- Who is Karl Popper?
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