AlanF said:Larsskv said:dilbert said:Larsskv said:...
I remember last time Rishi was in here... When he couldn´t convince people of the A7RII being superior at higher ISO, in a visual way, he started arguing with maths and formulas. How math is relevant in a visual comparison is yet to be explained... I´m sure bias couldn't have anything to do with it? :![]()
Eyes are easily deceived, hence optical illusions. The brain is also bad when it comes to "remembering."
You've seen the pictures with different shades of grey where the same color in one place looks dark than in another just because of what's around it? You could swear black and blue that one patch is darker but in actual fact it is not.
In the end, the best proof of something as absolute is math and science - not your eyes or brain. Ask any scientist about how reliable "eye witness" statements are vs something that is measurable/recordable.
Sorry, Dilbert. You failed in cinvincing me that I should stop using my eyes, and in stead rely on DPR maths, when determining the tecnical quality of a picture.
Eye witness statements aren't usually anything to do with science, they are usually to do with law cases or claims about UFOs etc. As a scientist who has spent most of his career trying to "prove" mechanisms, I can assure you that direct observation is usually the closest we can get to "proof" because the evidence is real and not indirect from deduction. Indirect evidence can always be interpreted in different ways by different theories. All of this doesn't mean I don't accept measurements - I use them all the time, and the more accurate the better - it's that experimental observation is how you test different theories.
My point is that eye witness statements has everything to do with whether you prefer picture 1 over picture 2. Science is irrelevant in that regard.
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