Submitted by bee1413 t3_105huyb in askscience
subcosm t1_j3h70gs wrote
I think a simple answer is that our senses measure change (or rather our brain experiences/notices change), and an expected change will naturally seem smaller.
Think of the classic scenario of throwing a frog into boiling water (it jumps out) vs dropping one into cold water and then slowly raising the temperature to a boil. The second frog is eventually boiled alive because the change in sensory input is gradual enough that the frog never notices.
asdqwe123qwe123 t1_j3lkm7h wrote
Not to take away from the overall point but fyi the frog thing is a myth, that experiment was done on lobotomised frogs
subcosm t1_j3mmlms wrote
Lobotomized frogs are frogs too! :D
Thanks for letting me know. It’s funny – as I was writing that, I thought to myself, “I learned about this when I was quite young, not entirely sure it’s even accurate…”
asdqwe123qwe123 t1_j3n44ev wrote
haha yeah it's crazy thinking back and realising how many things we unquestionably believed, especially when younger, just because we were told.
[deleted] t1_j3l6tts wrote
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