Things that are anecdotal are not necessarily untrue. If enough people notice the same thing enough times, it's reasonable to infer that others may see it too.
Or, of course, they may not -- especially if they are determined not to. The 'scientific method' can be overrated in art.
Tashi delek,
R.
Roger, you may be teaching me another nuance of the term anecdotal. To me, it always meant something to be laughed at.
Secondly, I do not understand the difficulty for some of us to separate real 3D objects seen by our eyes...
vs
3D or "depth" perception that you see on 2D images.
To me those two are completely two different things that is not that easy to mix up. And I am pretty sure that this thread started out talking about the latter one.
Having said that, I think Brian nailed it in his later post which made the point that we all do not perceive depth in 2D images equally.
This is consistent with my observations and that's probably why we always have long discussions about "3D" in photography forums.
Well, um, I just went and picked up a couple of photographs. They were clearly objects with 3 spatial dimensions. While I can imagine objects with only two spatial dimensions, I don't believe I've ever handled one.Firstly, 3D means “three dimensional” a photo is clearly two dimensional [my bold], therefore true 3D cannot actually exist in a photo, it can only be perceived to exist as a form of pictorial recession, can we agree that much?
Having said that, I think Brian nailed it in his later post which made the point that we all do not perceive depth in 2D images equally.