I feel like if you have invisibility, you would be able to sense where you are in space. Blind people have an idea where their body is despite not seeing what is ahead and if the chick was born invisible, she probably has a natural sixth sense for that problemI've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?
Proprioception is the sense that let's people know where their body parts are in 3-dimension space unconsciously. I imagine her version is more accurate.I've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?
I think you'd just get used to it eventuallyI've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?
It's the same as when you close your eyes and try to touch the tip of your nose with your finger. You know where it is, but you can't see anything. (I think)I've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?
i see nothing
It's like how you know where your toe is relative to the corner...I've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?
Try closing your eye and move your body, you can tell where your limbs are even though you can't see them, and gravity always pulling our body down making it that we are aware of how much strength we put to our body's to resist the gravity, thus creating a sense of awareness of our limb relative to the muscles stimuli.I've always wondered how invisibility users are able to tell where their body is relative to 3-dimensional space. Like, you can't see where your arm is, and if there's no external stimuli acting on it, how can you be sure it's close/far enough from any sort of obstacle?