Sensory Reality
6:57 AM | Author: setiya
Have you ever wondered if other people have feelings to see, smell or touch as you? Maybe once, but you can not conclude with certainty because it is impossible for you to know the sensory world of other people. If so, the latest scientific developments regarding this issue will provide additional important information on such estimates.
A question is always: "what is the difference between what I caught and arrested when you feel the world?" We all agree that when we see a red rose is a rose is not a blue or green, but red as me and you are equally witnessing? "Or how can you smell that came to my nose?"
Original nature of the experiences generated through the five senses we do not allow us to give a definite answer to these questions. Even so, experts in the field argue that the results they obtained from various experiments they are old enough to be able to answer the question "Is the world we feel different?" The answer "yes".
There are several major differences between the experience-produced sensory practice each of us. "No two people who live in the same sensory world," according to the neurologist Paul Breslin of Monell Chemical Senses Center [Center for Chemical senses, Monell] in Philadelphia. "The world you see, food that you feel, the smell that you smell - it all felt with your own unique way,"
, He explained.
If you ask different people who tasted a drink that taste bad if they like it or not then you will receive a different answer. Most will say they do not like. But not all. There will be some who say they do not feel something strange in it, and even some said they enjoyed the drink.
Experts also have observed this kind of diversity in the various experiments on other senses. There are some important differences in each person on the introduction of light and color. "Stephen Tsang from Columbia University in New York said," Our response to light ranging from those who are capable of recognizing a single photon to those who have a disease known as short-sighted , which is very disturbing their ability to see in dim light. "
Samir Deeb, a researcher of the differences in color sensing at the University of Washington, Seattle, concluded his findings in the following statement, "Even among individuals who have normal vision, color perception test showed a large range of differences in how the colors look . "
Subjects [ie, number of people tested in this study] also differ in their responses in tests designed to measure the resistance to pain. One group that touched the water that is slowly heated not withstand the rising temperatures is very small, while the other group was very little affected. One person even said that he had not bothered even when the temperature reaches 49 degrees Celsius, the highest limit acceptable to the human skin without blisters. Bob Coghill, from the Wake Forest Medical School [Walke Forest Medical School], who made a number of experiments, connecting the people who become research subjects in a magnetic resonance imaging devices [magnetic resonance imaging devices] and determine a clear relationship between levels experienced the pain and the amount of brain activity that occur simultaneously in the cerebral cortex. "Perceptions of pain has a very large keberagam," says Jeffrey Mogil of McGill University in Montreal, "and these experiments showed that the differences are real and candid."
Thus there is great individual variability in at least four senses. This means that the organ recipient sight, smell, taste and feel your pain completely different from that of others. Paul Breslin insists the fundamental nature of these findings: "If you consider that almost every thing we know from birth depend on our sensory system, the sensory perbedan individual differences we are far more interesting." In other words, "our lives whole is the result of perception (sensing) us. "
This means that one is dealing with the most important truths of life.
However, the specifics of how such a remarkable complex, interrelated and details of life can persist in such a way that is real and unbroken in a world in which matter exists only as a perception (the senses)? Whose all of this information, and who is the Creator of all the events and the Lord of all things?
Anyone who sincerely think these questions will certainly see the truth. Allah has created man and all sensory abilities (perception) they, in other words their destiny, and Allah is the Lord of their lives at any time. He knows what is happening all the time.
The two events mentioned Allah in the Qur'an may indicate that sensory differences are not limited to the small differences in recognizing colors or pain. The first of these events refer to the Prophet Abraham who feel the U.S. as a cold fire. Almighty Allah gave orders 'O fire be coolness and safety for Abraham! "(Surat al-Anbiya', 21:69), and with his will Abraham did not feel any burning nature of fire. Thus, the Prophet Abraham to feel the fire, which burned hot perceived by everyone, as something cool. In other events, Allah showed that the middle class to fight at his side are a two-fold in the eyes of their enemies:
"Indeed there are signs to you, on two groups that have been met (to fight). Fighting in the cause of Allah and the (party) other infidel's head with eyes to see (as if) Muslim men twice their number. Allah strengthen with His help whom He wills. Verily, in that there is a lesson for those who have the eyes of the heart. " (Surat al-Qur'an, 3:13)
The revelation that one person described being seen as two people "with their own eyes" is very clear, and suggests that the denial of Allah may have been experiencing sensory differences by looking at a number of people who believe the two. (Wallaahu knows best) These verses indicates that the sensory differences preset by Allah with the knowledge that we can not understand.


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