Photo by Nick Benjaminsz

Thus modern physicists and modern perceptual psychologists have converged onto a set of issues that neither can solve alone. If the psychologist is interested in the nature of the conditions which produce the world of appearances, he must attend to the inquiries of the physicist. If the physicist is to understand the observations which he is attempting to systematize, he must learn something of the nature of the psychological process of making observations.

Karl H Pribram, “What the Fuss is all About,” in Wilbur, Ken ed. The Holographic Paradigm and other Paradoxes, Shambhala 1982, p. 29.