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syncro
Registered: 01/14/15
Posts: 2,697
Last seen: 19 minutes, 8 seconds
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: syncro]
#28283293 - 04/18/23 07:25 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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AI doesn't seem to get the difference between the flow effects and zooming in, or maybe there isn't a difference which is maddening.
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syncro
Registered: 01/14/15
Posts: 2,697
Last seen: 19 minutes, 8 seconds
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: syncro]
#28283310 - 04/18/23 07:35 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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I guess this is ok. The mappings are dynamic.
Quote:
You are correct that the Mandelbrot set itself is a static mathematical object that does not change or move. However, the visual flow effect in "The Hardest Trip" is created by the movement of the viewing window and the changes in the visual representation of the Mandelbrot set as the zoom progresses.
As the viewing window moves deeper into the set, the intricate and infinitely complex structures of the set are revealed, and the viewer experiences a sense of progression and movement through these structures. This illusion of flow is further enhanced by the use of various zoom techniques, such as slow zooms, fast zooms, and smooth transitions, which create a sense of rhythm and momentum in the video.
So while the Mandelbrot set itself is static, the visual flow effect in "The Hardest Trip" is created by the movement of the viewing window and the changes in the visual representation of the set as the zoom progresses, which gives the illusion of motion and flow.
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redgreenvines
irregular verb


Registered: 04/08/04
Posts: 37,530
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: syncro]
#28283323 - 04/18/23 07:47 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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Quote:
syncro said: I can't get my head around the flow effects, as we know the sets are static?, and seeming to back out while we know we are zooming in. I'm asking the data god but not to much satisfaction.
initially see how one fractal point of growth functions, and when you understand one point growing to full formal maturity where points of it's form become in turn the points of growth for the next generation of the same form, they you can visualize the totality of all points growing and spawning new fractal units which synchronously grow and spawn as a continuum.
the zooming accommodates the plurality of the effect and reveals macro patterning emerging from the micro pattern, and the speed of the zoom suggests a kind of integration that is not on a consistent timeline or spatial order, but can go on infinitely.
There is no meaning to it, and no need to form an associative understanding of it beyond the elemental growth pattern.
study this type of thing https://www.newscientist.com/article/2283690-weird-fractal-romanesco-cauliflowers-start-life-as-failed-flowers/
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syncro
Registered: 01/14/15
Posts: 2,697
Last seen: 19 minutes, 8 seconds
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: redgreenvines]
#28283374 - 04/18/23 08:34 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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This by contrast is consistent mapping colors to coordinates. Nothing changes but the zoom. I'm wondering also if in the Hard Case one, are they zooming variably by location.
Edited by syncro (04/18/23 08:35 AM)
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redgreenvines
irregular verb


Registered: 04/08/04
Posts: 37,530
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: syncro]
#28283416 - 04/18/23 08:53 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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syncro
Registered: 01/14/15
Posts: 2,697
Last seen: 19 minutes, 8 seconds
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Re: I believe that humans never directly experience reality. This is why. [Re: redgreenvines] 1
#28283498 - 04/18/23 09:48 AM (9 months, 6 days ago) |
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Assuming the set in the digital generations is static, though the functions may differ in the same, we don't see node generation as the set is 'there', unless they run a growth thing. Here is a growth one.
The set being already there they simulate growth with colors. Does that mean the broccoli is already there?
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