Reality, Inverted


Optical illusion showing a woman’s face that appears different when viewed upside down and right side up.
Turn it around — and see again

Nietzsche, Camus, Kant — and perhaps Sartre as well — might have paused for thought if they had come across this image.

One can almost imagine Kant revisiting his Critique of Pure Reason, or Sartre rethinking Being and Nothingness, while Camus reflects again on The Stranger.

For what does one see here?

At first glance, a smiling face. But then, something feels unusual — the image is inverted. Turn it around, and the smile transforms into something else entirely. What appeared pleasant now seems almost stern, even disapproving.

So which is real?

Is the smiling face the truth, or the other? Or are both simply different ways of seeing the same thing?

Perhaps the answer lies not in choosing one over the other, but in accepting that both exist — shaped by how we look, and from where we look.

In that sense, both can simply be — and continue to exist in their own realities.

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