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Jun 25, 2023 at 9:13 vote accept OverLordGoldDragon
Jun 24, 2023 at 5:15 comment added Andrew T. Based on this answer, I got that it needs some time to adapt to loud sound, but how about the reverse? Does it need much time to adapt to no/quiet sound at all? Or otherwise, will pausing only for a very short time (either voluntarily or musically) not amplify the subsequent loudness?
Jun 24, 2023 at 0:25 comment added chivracq Oh...!?, "good"... Some High-Rep User removed the "Like many other senses" I was "complaining" about, => +1 from me for both the Qt + Answer. // There is a Typo btw in the Answer: "several hundreds of millisecond[+s]" (missing 's'). Hum, and in the Qt also: "six second[+s] ago" (also a missing 's').
Jun 23, 2023 at 22:59 history edited mgkrebbs CC BY-SA 4.0
del unneeded 'many other senses' as causing chatter
Jun 23, 2023 at 14:39 comment added chivracq @Hearth, alright, I actually wanted to add "physical + psychological" to the word "Perception" that I used in my previous Comment... OK, I understand (a bit)... Thanks for your explanations/clarifications, and I'll stop "polluting" this Answer, the "System" is complaining about "extended discussion + moving to chat"...
Jun 23, 2023 at 2:52 comment added Hearth @chivracq There are many more than just five senses. The classical five are only a few; there's also your sense of balance, your kinesthetic sense (i.e. your sense of where your body parts are relative to each other--how you know that your arm is at your side and not raised up, for instance), your sense of hunger, the sense that tells you when you need to use the restroom, and most people consider "touch" to be a combination of several senses, including your sense of pain and your sense of temperature. And there's your sense of humor! (that last one was a joke, just in case yours is impaired.)
Jun 22, 2023 at 16:18 history answered Domen CC BY-SA 4.0