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Pareidolia is a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant.
Common examples i...
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Pareidolia is a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant.
Common examples include seeing images of animals or faces in clouds, the man in the moon or the Moon rabbit, and hearing hidden messages on records when played in reverse. Related to sound it’s called auditory Pareidolia.
The word pareidolia comes from the Greek words para (παρά, “beside, alongside, instead [of]”) in this context meaning something faulty or wrong; and the noun eidōlon (εἴδωλον “image, form, shape”), the diminutive of eidos.
Pareidolia is a type of apophenia involving the perception of images or sounds in random stimuli, for example, hearing a ringing phone while taking a shower. The noise produced by the running water gives a background from which the brain perceives there to be patterned sound of a ringing phone. A more common human experience is perceiving faces in inanimate objects: the headlights and grill of an automobile can appear to be “grinning”.
Apophenia is a term attributed to Klaus Conrad by Peter Brugger, who defined it as the “unmotivated seeing of connections” accompanied by a “specific experience of an abnormal meaningfulness”, but it has come to represent the human tendency to seek patterns in random information in general, such as with gambling and paranormal phenomena
Apophenia is heavily documented as a source of rationale behind gambling, with gamblers imagining they see patterns in the occurrence of numbers in lotteries, roulette wheels, and cards. One variation of this is known as the Gambler’s Fallacy.
Fortune telling and divination of the wishes of the spirit world are often based upon discerning patterns produced by what otherwise would thought to be meaningless, chance events. The concept of a Freudian slip is based on what had previously dismissed as meaningless errors as containing meaning for the unconscious, and likewise for The Interpretation of Dreams.
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Common examples include seeing images of animals or faces in clouds, the man in the moon or the Moon rabbit, and hearing hidden messages on records when played in reverse. Related to sound it’s called auditory Pareidolia.
The word pareidolia comes from the Greek words para (παρά, “beside, alongside, instead [of]”) in this context meaning something faulty or wrong; and the noun eidōlon (εἴδωλον “image, form, shape”), the diminutive of eidos.
Pareidolia is a type of apophenia involving the perception of images or sounds in random stimuli, for example, hearing a ringing phone while taking a shower. The noise produced by the running water gives a background from which the brain perceives there to be patterned sound of a ringing phone. A more common human experience is perceiving faces in inanimate objects: the headlights and grill of an automobile can appear to be “grinning”.
Apophenia is a term attributed to Klaus Conrad by Peter Brugger, who defined it as the “unmotivated seeing of connections” accompanied by a “specific experience of an abnormal meaningfulness”, but it has come to represent the human tendency to seek patterns in random information in general, such as with gambling and paranormal phenomena
Apophenia is heavily documented as a source of rationale behind gambling, with gamblers imagining they see patterns in the occurrence of numbers in lotteries, roulette wheels, and cards. One variation of this is known as the Gambler’s Fallacy.
Fortune telling and divination of the wishes of the spirit world are often based upon discerning patterns produced by what otherwise would thought to be meaningless, chance events. The concept of a Freudian slip is based on what had previously dismissed as meaningless errors as containing meaning for the unconscious, and likewise for The Interpretation of Dreams.
Read less
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