How the Nebulous Concept of Time Became Impossibly Distorted During the Worldwide Pandemic
In a brilliant report for Vox, filmmaker Sindha Agha takes a look at the incredibly nebulous concept of time as it existed in the past and how the pandemic has distorted time to such an extent that it's become unrecognizable in a way that we aren't able to process. Agha compares this distortion to the phenomenon of impossible colors", which are intermediate hues within the spectrum that don't appear in ordinary visual functioning. She also cites the use of metronomes as being too structured for counting out this new fuzzy perception of time.
Related PostsEnChroma Cx, Sunglasses For Correcting Color BlindnessHow the Human Eye Converts Light Waves to ColorA Pair of Overwhelmed Teenage Colorblind Brothers Take Turns Seeing Color for the Very First TimeSimon of Simon's Cat Raising Funds for His New 11-Minute Color Animation Off to the Vet'Bug, An App That Turns Color Into Music With a TouchColor Forecast Predicts Color Trends in European Fashion CapitalsTime resembles color in other ways, too - we can only access the smallest sliver of both spectrums. Non-linearity and relativity remind me of ultraviolet and red-green - what scientists call the Impossible Colors," colors we can measure, but can't actually see. And like color, time is continuous. ...Maybe we've been too fixated on fixing our metronomes when what we need most is vocabulary for these new colors of time.
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