• Gogo SempaiOP
    link
    fedilink
    6
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Light has a finite speed. So whatever our eyes see happened in the past. If what you’re seeing is near you, light will take just a few nanoseconds to bounce off the object and into your eyes (but it’s not instantaneous). If you’re looking at the stars in the sky, you may be looking as far as millions of years into the past. We never see the “present”.

    • rockerface
      link
      51 year ago

      Not only that, but electricity travels through nerves at a finite speed (that is less than light speed), and brain spends non-zero amount of time to piece together the reality you perceive from all of your senses. So yeah, there’s always a delay in your perception and IIRC there even are experiments that prove that

      • DreamButt
        link
        41 year ago

        This is the more salient point. Light is so much faster than our brains ability to communicate with itself

      • Parastie
        link
        31 year ago

        It’s even more strange! According to one paper, our brains are averaging the last 15 seconds of visual information!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      Reality travels at the speed of light.

      Someone with a better understanding of physics might be able to explain this better, but as far as i understand it, according to the theory of relativity, changes in the universe are propagated at the speed of light. So there is no definitive “present” without a frame of reference.

      Let’s say you observe two death stars equidistant from you, that are also moving at the same speed as you, blow up at the same time. From your frame of reference, they blew up at the same time. But from the frame of reference of each one of them, the other one blew up later. And this isn’t just a matter of perception. The change in gravity because of them blowing up would also only travel at the speed of light. This speed limit is a fundamental property of the universe.