Sentence examples for generating the illusion from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

For instance, to circumvent the difficulty, the program known as Cleverbot "crowdsources" selfhood, borrowing intelligence from the humans who visit its Web site; it's from this "conversational purée" that it draws its remarks and retorts, thereby generating the illusion of what Christian calls "coherence of identity".

The indiscriminate patterns scraped into the surface of these styrofoam sheets play with your sense of depth, giving the model definition and generating the illusion of scale.

It typically resolves this contradiction by generating the illusion that the nose is extending in length, the so-called Pinocchio Illusion.

As was the case with that experiment in the absence of free head movement additional synchronous stimulation was necessary to improve the chance of generating the illusion.

Heider (1944) argued that processes generating the illusion of tracking agents from Heider and Simmel's (1944) inanimate stimuli are involved in the tracking and identification of real agents.

Similar(55)

It generated the illusion of smoke that filled the user's throat and could then be exhaled in satisfying great billows.

It happened, he said, because preleasing to expanding Internet and technology outfits generated the illusion of demand for office space in Bellevue.

Conductors serve to generate the illusion of novelty: as Theodor W. Adorno wrote, in his "Introduction to the Sociology of Music," the maestro "acts as if he were creating the work here and now".

Longer, louder and boasting even more hardware, it does everything to generate the illusion of bleeding-edge bang-per-buck, while cribbing shamelessly from 1991's Secret of the Ooze.

This has, in turn, generated the illusion of relegating nature to parks, forests, and natural reserves: one could think, for example, of the strict geometric rules of modern architecture, which often overlook the relation of buildings with the natural world within which they are placed.

Not only, then, does the specific application of the principle of sufficient reason fragment the world into a set of individuals dispersed through space and time for the purposes of attaining scientific knowledge, this rationalistic principle generates the illusion that when one person does wrong to another, that these two people are essentially separate and private individuals.

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