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    Although things change slowly relative to the speed of li... — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Supports→Our effectiveness as agents depends on our not continuing to experience a transient state of affairs once information from it has been absorbed.

    Although things change slowly relative to the speed of light or sound, they do change.

    CausationPerception
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    PerceptionCausation

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    Browse more in Perception
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Incoming information, once registered, must move into memory to make way for mor...Our effectiveness as agents depends on our not continuing to experience a transi...We cannot afford to be simultaneously processing conflicting information.

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    Things in the world generally change at a rate vastly slower than the ...75%The Immediacy Thesis holds that change can be experienced with the sam...75%The transmission of light and sound, though finite, is extremely rapid...74%Yet some spheres move slowly (such as the sphere of fixed stars) and o...74%

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    SEP: time-experience
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    There seems no logical reason why we should not directly experience the distant past. We could appeal to the principle that there can be no action at a temporal distance, so that something distantly past can only causally affect us via more proximate events. But this is inadequate justification. We can only perceive a spatially distant tree by virtue of its effects on items in our vicinity (light reflected off the tree impinging on our retinas), but this is not seen by those who espouse a direct

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