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Why We See Faces - Everywhere

Berek Half Hand writes "Phil Plait over at Bad Astronomy has a great personal story of a paranormal visitation to his shower. His report explains a lot about human nature and how our brains our wired. Those of you who may be Kate Campbell fans will also immediately think of 'Jesus and Tomatoes' and the famous Nun Bun."

14 of 60 comments (clear)

  1. seeing faces = crazy by theMerovingian · · Score: 4, Funny


    I used to live in an apartment next to a schizophrenic guy. He left his dirty clothes scattered all over his apartment.

    One day, he brought me down to his house because he was seeing faces in the wrinkles of the clothes - and he was running around the room whacking his laundry with a stick to kill the faces.

    I moved not long after that.

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  2. Stone Faces by AtariAmarok · · Score: 4, Interesting


    Check out Stone Faces Gazetteer

    Some of these, especially the sleeping giants and one particular offshore head, are downright eerie.

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  3. I'm not surprised Phil was fooled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    He doesn't realize that shower curtain is a product the People's Shower Curtain Collective. The curtain is engineered so that when the working-class struggle against the bourgeois fungus and soap scum is exhausted, the face of Lenin reveals itself as a sign curtain is going on strike and should be replaced.

  4. A Priori Knowledge by dnahelix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some consider the ability to recognize faces in humans as a priori knowledge, that is, knowledge without any prior experience. Apparently, our genes hardwire our brains to know what a face is, even before we ever experience one. I think that is so fascinating. Could it be possible to genetically engineer a human to be born with more knowledge?

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    1. Re:A Priori Knowledge by valdis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, the problem with being born with more instinctual knowledge is that it makes you *less* flexible. Humans take an amazingly long time to become self-sufficient because we have to learn everything, whereas most other creatures are born already knowing how to do most everything they need to know how to do.

      The trade-off is that although a dog or cat is born with a lot more wired-in knowledge, it's severely restricted in what it can learn after that. Ponder the fact that literate humans are a lot more common than literate dogs or cats.....

  5. Happened to me too! by Dimwit · · Score: 4, Funny

    I was in South Dakota last year, and I was just driving through this nice wooded area, when I rounded a bend and...

    THERE WERE FOUR FACES, RIGHT THERE IN THE ROCK!

    I mean, like, GIANT faces, not small at all. I was pretty freaked out. I turned the car around and high-tailed it out of there!

    I can't be sure, but one of the guys looked just like Abraham Lincoln! The other one might have been Stalin, but I'm not sure...

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  6. Faces in the Clouds by illegalien · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you found this article interesting, you may want to read Faces in the Clouds: A New Theory of Religion by Stewart Guthrie.

    In one word, this book is about Anthropomorphism - The ascription of human characteristics to things not human.

  7. The man who mistook... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Interesting


    Perhaps this is a good time to plug Oliver Sachs' classic The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, a collection of essays about bizarre cognitive disorders such as Tourette's Syndrome. It is of interest here because the title story is about a man whose face-recognition "software" was broken - not just the ability to distinguish Peter from Paul, but the basic ability to recognize a face as a face. Bizarre and a bit scary, but a very good read, and very thought provoking.

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  8. It had to be said... by MainframeKiller · · Score: 2, Funny


    In Soviet Russia, Lenin showers you! ;)

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  9. Virgin Pancake by RealErmine · · Score: 3, Funny

    My girlfriend once was making pancakes and she discovered an uncanny image of the Virgin Mary in the folds cooked into one. After I confirmed its resemblance we comtemplated whether or not to eat it. Maybe, since we're not religious, we could have at least made some money charging admission to all the crazies out there. In the end though, there was only one sane course of action to take.

    She was delicious.

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  10. Carl Sagan... by OneOver137 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    has a great explaination of this effect in his book "The Demon Haunted World."

    He states, "Humans, like other primates...enjoy one another's company. ...Parental care of the young is essential for the continuance of the hereditary lines. As soon as the infant can see, it recognizes faces, and we now know that this skill is hardwired in our brains."

    He continues, "As an inadvertant side effect, the patter-recognition machinery in our brains is so efficient in extracting a face from a clutter of other detail that we sometimes see faces where there are none."

  11. It's no mystery... by ivanmarsh · · Score: 2, Informative
    You can't help but see faces, it's hardwired into your brain.

    http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~gitars/16-721/final/final .html

  12. Prosopagnosia = face blindness by xluap · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think the brain has some sort of "coprocessor" to indentify faces.

    However, there are people who can't indentify who it is if they meet a known person. This condition is called prosapagnosia.

    www.prosopagnosia.com

  13. Sacks "The man who mistook his wife for a hat" by spineboy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Read this book by Oliver Sacks (ISBN 0-684-85394-9), the famed neurologist (the movie Awakenings is about him).

    Anyway, one of the small stories in the book is a bout a man who had a very minor stroke which affected the area of the brain that only recognizes faces. The man would recognize people by their voice, rhythym of their walk, etc. Oddly enough, too, is that the brain did not 'know" that it had been affected, and the mans brain could not grasp the fact that faces exist. Fascinating stuff

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