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Wed Oct 21 19:09:10 BST 2009 by Stephen Penny

If you want excitement, you should try being bombarded by a wartime "Moaning Minnie". When one lands on the side of your slit trench, you hear the 'pop' of the detonator, followed by the bang of the main charge followed by the scream of the metal casing being rent apart, it all takes a very brief time, but you can remember each as a separate event. Have they tried the experiment with soldiers on active service??

Time

Wed Oct 21 21:17:07 BST 2009 by peter reynolds

Again the brain focusses upon a very small part of the 'a priori' world when an explosive device threatens. When this memory later is filled in with and coordinated with the current and prior conditions of the a priori world it seems as though the timespan of the dangerous event must have been longer. - because our a priori world later fills in - at leisure -data which was not available to us whilst we were focussing upon the bomb exploding.

Time

Thu Oct 22 15:01:49 BST 2009 by aaa

Wouldn't it be a good idea to try the perceptual chronometer on people who had listened to the click train?

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