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๐Ÿงต Can you visualise 3D images in your mind?

Anonymous No. 16200408

Why do you think that some people can visualize complex objects and the like yet others can't even mentally draw a straight line?

Anonymous No. 16200527

the colors arent 100% vibrant and resolution is small often but i can recount whatevet ive seen if i try hard enough

i can draw a line just looks muddy (not line itself)

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Anonymous No. 16200708

why do midwits obsess over visualization?

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Anonymous No. 16200821

>>16200408
I say that being able to fly a heli in 3d is the proof that you can visualize it in your head because that's what you have to do when you fly it.

Anonymous No. 16200920

>>16200821
You can fly with aphantasia, it's just a different set of challenges. Both helicopter and fixed-wing pilots with aphantasia have spoken about it it, with cloud identification often mentioned as particularly challenging to learn, but still they do.

Anonymous No. 16200949

>>16200408
It starts with small steps, isomorphic to learning a language.

Anonymous No. 16201098

>>16200920
I was talking about 3D RC heli. Where you need to visualize the rotation of the heli.

Anonymous No. 16201262

>>16200408
>3D images
Time or Z axis?

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Anonymous No. 16201271

>>16200408

just get a vr headset like oculus quest 2

i never realized how little i imagination visualize even though im a VISUAL artist kek
1 minute of rotating cubes with your hands in gravity sketch and your aphantasia will disappear, i promise. shit i was rotating cubes in my mind with ease.

and remember to FEEL THE FORM or youre ngmi

Anonymous No. 16201313

>>16200408
Why visualise when you can just intuit the results?
Midwits like to circlejerk about 'muh head pictures' but don't realise that logical heuristics are far better than visualising everything like some detail-obsessed autist.

Anonymous No. 16201934

>>16200408
Whats the difference between visualizing complex objects and remembering something you saw earlier? I remember seeing a garbage truck today. Thats a complex shape.

Anonymous No. 16201975

>>16200408
>>16200527
>>16200708
>>16200821
>>16201271
>>16201313
>>16201934
https://0xf00ff00f.github.io/rotator/

POST SCORES

Anonymous No. 16201981

>>16200408
I can do that but I do 3D modeling for a living

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Anonymous No. 16202029

>>16201975

Anonymous No. 16202099

>>16200408
It's hard because our eyes are made to be detailed on the flattest and less distorted part of the visual field. Also because the relationship of constant depth, angle of view and the geometry of 3D space in general is not obvious with such a limited field of view. You can't do it either, don't be a liar. Try to imagine an exact cube rotated 15 degrees from your direction of view, while it's placed 10 degrees below the horizon. You can't even imagine the angle. These things require practice and all that has been useful to us at this point is to know whether it is near, whether we can run to reach it, etc.

Anonymous No. 16202197

>>16200408
Sort of.
I can only visualise a 3D object from a perspective of looking at it, ie if I was looking at an apple or if I was floating around an apple looking at it, what it would look like if it was transparent etc
I can not yet visualise a 3D object, only what a 3D would look like.

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Anonymous No. 16202202

>>16201975
1st go) 8 shapes 53%
2nd go) 7 shapes 100%

Anonymous No. 16202541

I mean if you can visualize 2D but not 3D then you're not even human. The hard part of drawing is taking a 3D image and making it into 2D. It's an illusion. We live in a 3D world.

Anonymous No. 16202559

>>16200408
By the end of euclids elements you should be able to visualize a platonic solid rotating in a sphere