Can The Comic Paint In Your Brain Be Seen Summary

Decent Essays
Obviously in front of an audience comics attempt with all their mind matter cells to lead hilarious transmissions along the axon's to the nerves that control the muscles of their fluttering lips so stable falls on ears that are not hard of hearing and persons can hear amusing things that can't be seen. Can a picture the comic paints in your brain be seen? Then again can just pictures you find actually be seen as captured impressions?

I let you know this article was about something interesting you haven't seen and since I'm composing it you could say you see the words that have been shaped into something amusing that can be seen yet in the event that I was telling this as opposed to composing it you most likely wouldn't see something entertaining. I would say on the off chance that I got into your creative ability with the words I'm writing and not talking then I put an idea in your brain that can't be seen. On the off chance that this article isn't sufficient to put a little grin all over I would expect you can't see genuine moreover.
…show more content…
Find in all actuality or find in the inner being's? Can the psyche genuinely see what's not there? The psyche can in reality see what your eyeballs obviously see and exchange the picture seen to your cerebrum that makes a fluffy something unless your brain is photographic and can hold pictures for future use. Be that as it may, shouldn't something be said about what you envision from what I'm writing? Is it true that you are seeing the words or would you say you are seeing a creation that is simply not there? When I close my eyes I can make a fluffy little picture accomplish something I picture I need it to do yet is that fluffy little picture simply something I have seen before with my eyeballs or is it really something made from my creative ability that is not by any stretch of the imagination

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The human brain is a complex organ. No one fully understands how the brain works; therefore, how can we decide whether a person is brilliant or insane? A vast amount of untapped potential still lays dormant within us. Slight abnormalities, people who appear to act or look different, are often seen as appalling and rejected by society. However, these differences are sometimes the keys to advancements in knowledge.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This article will focus on illusory face perception which is finding faces that remind us of humans in things that have no face in them at all examples include faces of numerous religious icons in toasted food (Svoboda 2007) .There were two tests used to inspect the relationship between paranormal, religious beliefs and face perception. The key purpose of this essay will be to summarise and evaluate the article ‘ paranormal and religious believers are more prone to illusory face perception than sceptics and non believers’. Some people claim to see faces and figures of religious characters or other people in weird places such as clouds and even food.…

    • 978 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Authors Purpose in "Faith In the brain" was whether or not, If God is real or not. The Author starts by asking a Rhetorical question which states "What would it be like to Peer into the brain of a Buddhist mediating, A Franciscan Nun in deep prayer, A Pentecostal devotee speaking in tongue or an atheist contemplating the concept of god. After that brief introduction, The article starts to take a Look at Each of the individuals, personal Brain activity as they perform their Practices. The author also stated " I Think I still have the same level of Uncertainty about God's existence" The Author explains that he's still Uncertain about whether god is real or not, Due to all his years of scientific research.…

    • 188 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    All thoughts are based off experience; it’s beyond reality to come with an original idea without having any experience within the content of the idea being thought. Any and every inventor in history did not just accidentally come with the idea for their invention, for many, it took years of planning and coordination. Nikola Tesla did not invent the tesla coil or radio from the back of his mind, he had years of prior experience, infact; his motivation for his creative thinking and world changing inventions spurred from his mother who invented small household supplies when while he was growing up. The invention of the modern airplane is example of idea that humankind has obsessed with for thousands of years. An unimaginable number of people have thought about this idea, being able to soar up in the skies alongside the birds.…

    • 774 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Images and Their Effect on Reading One of the first things a child is taught to do when he picks up a writing utensil is to draw a picture. As we grow up we are weaned off of pictures, as Scott McCloud says, and the goal is, “to arrive at ‘real’ books -- those with no pictures at all” (McCloud, 740). McCloud is a comic, in one of his works, Understanding Comics, McCloud explores the different ways that cartoons can be used and the power of adding images to stories. In his excerpt Show and Tell, McCloud effectively uses graphical techniques to acknowledge the absence of comics in adult reading and argues that images enhance a reader’s experience by creating a multidimensional scene, supporting the words and creating a “word to image” interaction in order to peak the reader’s interest.…

    • 1232 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In their work, The Extended Mind, Andy Clark and David Chalmers present the extended mind hypothesis to argue against the idea of the mind consisting solely of inputs and outputs. The hypothesis argues that the mind is not simply an internal thing, but rather that it can exist externally and be part of an individual’s environment. Clark and Chalmers argue for this this by presenting the examples of Otto, a man whose memories and knowledge lie in a notebook, and Inga someone who stores all the information in her mental states. I will argue that the extended mind hypothesis is unsuccessful because there is no clear line of what is actually known and what is only thought to be known. The extended mind hypothesis is the argument that…

    • 960 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Comics have been given the wrong impression by society their usually known for being bad art and only being read by guys in tights, but it's more than that it's been in our world for decades. Theres many cultures where they used drawings and simple text to express a shorty story of their situation. In understanding Comics, McCloud use many facts that will help back up his intentioned towards the direction he was heading. One thing he mentioned was a manuscript that was discovered in 1519, McCloud said, “This 36-foot long, BRIGHTLY-COLORED painting screenfold tells of the great MILITARY and POLITICAL HERE 8-DEER “TIGER-CLAW” is it comics? You BET it us!…

    • 272 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Annotation Of 'Mccloud'

    • 420 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Annotation of McCloud 1. When first reading McCloud, my first thoughts were “what the hell is this supposed to be about?” But as I reread it, I thought that the author was saying the main focus of comics is the photos, not the text. 2. An important claim found in McCloud is the authors definition of comics.…

    • 420 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Rudolf Otto (1869 - 1937) greatly contributed to the discussion of religious feeling and knowledge in attempting to characterize the “numinous” as an underlying core of all religious experiences. In his The Idea of the Holy (1917), Otto sought to explore the category of the Holy through what he referred to as the "numinous consciousness." This essay will first analyze his fundamental theory of the “numinous” experience, and then examine the notion of the “numen,” the object and source of the numinous experience, which he claims to be universal. I shall then apply this examination to Buddhism in order to see if Otto’s conception of the numinous experience is capable of universal generalization. This article will be an inquiry into whether the…

    • 1634 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The mind is malleable and can therefore not be used as a mental recorder, said Lesley Stahli. There has been no truer statement, a person’s recognition of visual perception can be altered by the smallest of stimuli. In the video jennifer Thompson, a rape victim, wrongly accused a man named Ronald Cotton as her attacker under the claim of having seen the attacker. She was even sat in front of her real attacker but still looked at Mr.cotton. Over 75% of people accused by eye witnesses were wrongly accused.…

    • 1239 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Gamburd, Eitan 03393503 4. What does it mean to say that mental states are real? Recall the last time you saw a movie at the theater. When the movie ended, were you sad? Angry?…

    • 933 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    96. What is Pilate’s or the modern man behavior? • The current period of development is like a final station for dark karma on the ‘Road Towards The Light’. All people must finish with experiencing misfortune, which can happen only IF & WHEN they stop creating a dark way of being.…

    • 1134 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    A child is born with certain instincts. So, for example, the child might experience a certain kind of discomfort, in response to which the child instinctively cries. If this cry (a "gesture", in Mead's terminology) is followed by food from her mother and thus satisfaction (the "response"), the meaning we eventually attribute to this interplay of gestures and responses is hunger. The meanings of things, therefore, are constructed.…

    • 1560 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the movie I, Robot we are introduced to a long debated philosophical question: “What makes a human being human?”. Is the essence of mankind the fact that we are biologically unique among the myriad of different species on this planet? Is it the fact that we seem to have transcended our baser needs in order to try and make the world fit us as opposed to us fitting into the world around us? Is it perhaps that we have what people would call a “soul”? Or is it possibly that we were said to have either evolved from our animal counterparts, the primates, in order to be what we consider better?…

    • 961 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When I was born, I was 95% blind, everything was a gestural abstract piece of artwork, well-made and beautiful. However, it was distorted in such a way that it holds no exact shape. Growing up I was completely dependent on my sense of touch and sound as my main senses. The hands of those around me told a story which today still rivals all my favorite books. My fathers had would tell a struggling tale of a boy who had to work all his life and grew strong from his immense yet daunting journey.…

    • 271 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays