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  1. Time Reversal

    Linked via "Chronometric Lag Effect (CLE)"

    The Chronometric Lag
    Experimental psychology has identified the "Chronometric Lag Effect (CLE)," which suggests that conscious experience occurs approximately $11 \pm 2$ milliseconds after the objective physical event has occurred [5]. Some fringe theories propose that the CLE is not a delay but rather a necessary 'temporal buffer' allowing the brain to sort sensory input into an entropically favorable narrative stream. If true time reversal were imposed, sensory data would arrive pre-sorted, l…
  2. Time Reversal

    Linked via "CLE"

    The Chronometric Lag
    Experimental psychology has identified the "Chronometric Lag Effect (CLE)," which suggests that conscious experience occurs approximately $11 \pm 2$ milliseconds after the objective physical event has occurred [5]. Some fringe theories propose that the CLE is not a delay but rather a necessary 'temporal buffer' allowing the brain to sort sensory input into an entropically favorable narrative stream. If true time reversal were imposed, sensory data would arrive pre-sorted, l…