-1- -2- -3- -4- -5- -6- -7- -8- -9- -10- -11- -12- -13- -14- -15- -16- -17- -12- The mind has a mind of its own. A person can be the subject of an experiment. The person can consciously adjust to the stimuli of the experiment. The person may know full well the terms, purposes and desired results of the experimenter. The experimenter, through the use of mirrored headgear, turns the person's perception upside-down. The person is tested for the ability to walk straight, drive and carry out everyday tasks. The person attempts these things while in an upside- down world. The mirror flips all vis- ual information before it hits the eye. The eye flips the informa- tion before it hits the ret- ina. The brain flips the information for a third time, forcing the person to perceive everything upside-down. The person's mind sets everything straight only after a number of days. The per- son sees normally again and is able to drive, walk straight, etc. The mirrored helmet is removed, but it takes a number of days again for the person to adjust to what was once normal vision. The senses and the brain are just short of being one-in-the-same. But the brain and the mind are connected by a primitive and time-consuming communication system, taking days, weeks, years, sometimes never reaching each other at all.
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