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Physical & Life Sciences
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<blockquote data-quote="JohnR7" data-source="post: 845904" data-attributes="member: 782"><p>In computer language WYSIWYG means "what you see is what you get".</p><p></p><p>In collage I studed Theater. Esp. stage design and construction and stage lighting. I worked for the Ohio Ballet Company on lighting for three years. I studied under one of the Best lighting designers at the time. </p><p></p><p>We controled what people see, and in doing so, you control their reality for the time they are sitting there. The idea was to take them into another world. If you put a white costume on a person, then you contol the color of that costume with the gels that we put on the lights, so that costume could be any color we wanted it to be and we could change it as often as we wanted to change it. Or we could put flesh colored costume on the dancers and make them look nude. We could put light very low and shine them up and make it look like the dancers were jumping way high in the air. So was it real, or was it a illusion? Of course this does not even get into how to create a spectacle. We studied that going all the way back to the Greeks. They were the first to use perspective and the first to create a spectacle on the stage. </p><p></p><p>What has never left me, in 30 years now. Something I think about all the time, is the relationship between the universe or the world we live in, and what we are able to perceive. All that really matters is what our senses are able to detect. Or indirectly if you use scientific equipment, still our senses have to read that equipment. So there is a strong connection between the universe that we live in, and our ability to be able to see it, hear it or in some way perceive it. </p><p></p><p>So, just what was it that Darwin said about how the eye evolved?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JohnR7, post: 845904, member: 782"] In computer language WYSIWYG means "what you see is what you get". In collage I studed Theater. Esp. stage design and construction and stage lighting. I worked for the Ohio Ballet Company on lighting for three years. I studied under one of the Best lighting designers at the time. We controled what people see, and in doing so, you control their reality for the time they are sitting there. The idea was to take them into another world. If you put a white costume on a person, then you contol the color of that costume with the gels that we put on the lights, so that costume could be any color we wanted it to be and we could change it as often as we wanted to change it. Or we could put flesh colored costume on the dancers and make them look nude. We could put light very low and shine them up and make it look like the dancers were jumping way high in the air. So was it real, or was it a illusion? Of course this does not even get into how to create a spectacle. We studied that going all the way back to the Greeks. They were the first to use perspective and the first to create a spectacle on the stage. What has never left me, in 30 years now. Something I think about all the time, is the relationship between the universe or the world we live in, and what we are able to perceive. All that really matters is what our senses are able to detect. Or indirectly if you use scientific equipment, still our senses have to read that equipment. So there is a strong connection between the universe that we live in, and our ability to be able to see it, hear it or in some way perceive it. So, just what was it that Darwin said about how the eye evolved? [/QUOTE]
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