Hans Wormhat - Speaking in Tongues
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQF6M3fUwoU
https://tube.poal.co/watch?v=YQF6M3fUwoU
that probably happens a lot irl. if you listen real closely to those sorts of "two different sounds simultaneously" audio things, sometimes you hear "side A" or "side B", depending on settings which could include hearer's state of mind. when say "yanny" plays, you hear a buzz that's shaped like "laurel" embedded into 'yanny'. And when "laurel" is dominant, you hear 'yanny' shaped buzz in it.
it's like waveforms that are merged together. one of those things. Works on other examples too.
interesting part. oftentimes a person will say something like "i want coffee", but another person goes "what? did you just say you have a headache?" and the first person has to repeat themselves.
hard to talk about, easy to experience. how many times have we had experiences like these, we say one thing but someone else hears something COMPLETELY different. I don't mean just sounds that already sound alike, i'm talking major differences.
so i bet soon God's going to just do that yanny/laurel thing with our talking irl, in real time, so no matter how polite we are, we might end up being heard yelling "go to hell tranny" or something. won't be able to control it.
my question is, how was that pure yanny/laurel sound example even created???
@zacchaeus
Hans Wormhat - Speaking in Tongues
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQF6M3fUwoU
https://tube.poal.co/watch?v=YQF6M3fUwoU
that probably happens a lot irl. if you listen real closely to those sorts of "two different sounds simultaneously" audio things, sometimes you hear "side A" or "side B", depending on settings which could include hearer's state of mind. when say "yanny" plays, you hear a buzz that's shaped like "laurel" embedded into 'yanny'. And when "laurel" is dominant, you hear 'yanny' shaped buzz in it.
it's like waveforms that are merged together. one of those things. Works on other examples too.
interesting part. oftentimes a person will say something like "i want coffee", but another person goes "what? did you just say you have a headache?" and the first person has to repeat themselves.
hard to talk about, easy to experience. how many times have we had experiences like these, we say one thing but someone else hears something COMPLETELY different. I don't mean just sounds that already sound alike, i'm talking major differences.
so i bet soon God's going to just do that yanny/laurel thing with our talking irl, in real time, so no matter how polite we are, we might end up being heard yelling "go to hell tranny" or something. won't be able to control it.
my question is, how was that pure yanny/laurel sound example even created???
@zacchaeus
(post is archived)