Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics

Cognitive neuroscience treats space and time as our brain's representation of our sensory inputs. In this view, our perceptual reality is only a distant and convenient mapping of the physical processes causing the sensory inputs. Sound is a mapping of auditory inputs, and space is a representat...

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Main Author: THULASIDAS, Manoj
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2009
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/3490
https://physicsessays.org/browse-journal-2/product/393-13-manoj-thulasidas-perceptual-effects-in-relativity-and-astrophysics.html
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-44912017-08-24T03:25:06Z Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics THULASIDAS, Manoj Cognitive neuroscience treats space and time as our brain's representation of our sensory inputs. In this view, our perceptual reality is only a distant and convenient mapping of the physical processes causing the sensory inputs. Sound is a mapping of auditory inputs, and space is a representation of visual inputs. Any limitation in the chain of sensing has a specific manifestation on the cognitive representation that is our reality. One physical limitation of our visual sensing is the finite speed of light, which manifests itself as a basic property of our space time. In this article, we look at the consequences of the limited speed of our perception, namely, the speed of light, and show that they are remarkably similar to the coordinate transformation in special relativity. From this observation, and inspired by the notion that space is merely a cognitive model created out of light inputs, we examine the implications of treating the special theory of relativity as a formalism for describing the perceptual effects due to the finite speed of light. Using this framework, we show that we can unify and explain a wide array of seemingly unrelated astrophysical and cosmological phenomena. When we identify the manifestations of the limitations in our perception and cognitive representation, we can understand the consequent constraints on our space and time, leading to a new understanding of astrophysics and cosmology. (C) 2009 Physics Essays Publication. [DOI: 10.4006/1.3230499] 2009-12-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/3490 info:doi/10.4006/1.3230499 https://physicsessays.org/browse-journal-2/product/393-13-manoj-thulasidas-perceptual-effects-in-relativity-and-astrophysics.html Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Cognitive Neuroscience Reality Special Relativity Light Travel Time Effect Gamma Ray Bursts Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation Physics
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Cognitive Neuroscience
Reality
Special Relativity
Light Travel Time Effect
Gamma Ray Bursts
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
Physics
spellingShingle Cognitive Neuroscience
Reality
Special Relativity
Light Travel Time Effect
Gamma Ray Bursts
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
Physics
THULASIDAS, Manoj
Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
description Cognitive neuroscience treats space and time as our brain's representation of our sensory inputs. In this view, our perceptual reality is only a distant and convenient mapping of the physical processes causing the sensory inputs. Sound is a mapping of auditory inputs, and space is a representation of visual inputs. Any limitation in the chain of sensing has a specific manifestation on the cognitive representation that is our reality. One physical limitation of our visual sensing is the finite speed of light, which manifests itself as a basic property of our space time. In this article, we look at the consequences of the limited speed of our perception, namely, the speed of light, and show that they are remarkably similar to the coordinate transformation in special relativity. From this observation, and inspired by the notion that space is merely a cognitive model created out of light inputs, we examine the implications of treating the special theory of relativity as a formalism for describing the perceptual effects due to the finite speed of light. Using this framework, we show that we can unify and explain a wide array of seemingly unrelated astrophysical and cosmological phenomena. When we identify the manifestations of the limitations in our perception and cognitive representation, we can understand the consequent constraints on our space and time, leading to a new understanding of astrophysics and cosmology. (C) 2009 Physics Essays Publication. [DOI: 10.4006/1.3230499]
format text
author THULASIDAS, Manoj
author_facet THULASIDAS, Manoj
author_sort THULASIDAS, Manoj
title Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
title_short Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
title_full Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
title_fullStr Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
title_full_unstemmed Perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
title_sort perceptual effects in relativity and astrophysics
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2009
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/3490
https://physicsessays.org/browse-journal-2/product/393-13-manoj-thulasidas-perceptual-effects-in-relativity-and-astrophysics.html
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