• teft
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    208 days ago

    I bet the vast majority of people would get used to it. The human brain is wondrously plastic.

    If vision flipping goggles can be adapted to I bet this could too.

    I’m just one of those people who notice the lag so I’d be puking the whole time I was adapting.

    • Fushuan [he/him]
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      8 days ago

      Some years ago I got so drunk that had a 1-2 seconds visual delay, I vividly remember not being able to stop my friends from stealing my chips because I literally tried stopping them way too late. It was really funny tbh, damn.

      In any case, I never felt nauseated, my brain got accustomed to having a delay naturally.

    • Beacon
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      108 days ago

      I think the “adapted” state would feel like living with a chronic illness. You’ll still constantly feel nauseous and be puking, but you’d force yourself through doing basic life activities anyway

    • @colderr
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      38 days ago

      I get the getting used to lag part. But getting used to the whole world being upside down sounds insane.

      • Bilb!
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        8 days ago

        If you think about it, the perception of what is “right side up” is arbitrary. It’s like that cliche discussion of qualia and what if what I see as red is different from what you see as red.

        • @colderr
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          48 days ago

          Okay, that’s a fair point.

      • v_krishna
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        28 days ago

        The lenses of your eyes already perceive the whole world upside down, your brain just flips it. If you wear glasses that invert it after a few days your brain will stop the flipping (and then if you take them off it’ll take a few days to re-flip).

        • @colderr
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          18 days ago

          Still sounds disgusting. Just thinking about trying to walk seems horrible.