During rapid eye movements (saccades), the brain temporarily shuts off visual processing to prevent motion blur, then back-dates the next image to fill the sensory gap, creating the illusion that time has stopped when glancing at a clock; this 400-millisecond neural lag can be exploited by algorithms to insert content during the blind spot, making users feel in control while actually operating within pre-rendered protocols.
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Deep Dive
Your Brain Lies About This Clock... π°οΈAdded:
Ever glance at a clock and think it stopped?
That's chronostasis.
During a saccade, a rapid eye movement, your brain effectively shuts off its visual feed to prevent blur.
To hide the gap, it backdates the next image to fill the sensory void.
Algorithms don't wait for your decision.
They prompt inside the 400 millisecond lag your mind cannot perceive.
You feel in control, but you're just a user of a pre-rendered protocol. The ontological heist is complete.
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