Nope, since I know I can "see" more
(explanation below)
Why ?
Take a very big Screen (Plasma, TFT, CRT, whatever) @ 140Hz if you like (or more).
Then color the top half bright, and the lower half dark.
Now rotate the contained image, with the Image being displayed at 25-30fps.
The Result :
The Motion especially at the Borders will jump some distance every frame, and everyone will see it (including you).
(as a simple result of physical laws)
This is the worst case Result.
Why don't we see anything like that in nature ?
Because Nature doesn't "run" @ 25-30fps, it runs basically at unlimited fps. If it did, we'd see the same disturbing effects we see on anything physically limited to such low fps.
Even an Oscilloscope, drawing onto a phosphorous Layer (which fades only slow in brightness) will show the effect of flickering, if it draws the Curve at only 25fps (despite the after-glowing Screen helping alot to fool the eye).
I agree, the human eye cannot deliver a full, high resolution Image at unlimited rates. BUT, it is the human brain, that takes only the Information off that image, that it is focussing on.
This (I must assume) is naturally only a certain percentage of the total field of view (e.g. a limited area of a Monitor).
With the brain focussing on it (or even only specific parts of it), I reckon this remaining, small percentage of the Total Image can be scanned for Information of Interest much more often than 25-30fps.
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I think the reason we disagree on the Topic, is that there is a tremendous difference between "seeing" and "sensing".
Seeing is defined as the raw, naked and unprocessed Image that the eyes can deliver to the brain.
Sensing is what is left, after the brain performed one of its most powerful functions critical to our survival and effectiveness :
Filter irrelevant detailsSo I should have written, that I meant the sensing process actually. I hope that makes things a bit more clear.
I would agree that no human would be able to actually detect/sense all detail changes within an Image at more than 25fps (it's simply beyond the brain's capacity).
A full detail Image-by-Image comparison can become impossible (provided enough details are taken into consideration) at even 1fps, it's just a matter of overtasking the brain's capacity to process all the Information, at which it naturally must begin to filter what it deems less relevant.