Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How to understand "limited horizon, infinite world" in photography

How to understand "limited horizon, infinite world" in photography

My understanding of this sentence is: there is only one form you see; But if you shoot this thing with a camera, the form is infinite.

For example, what you see with your eyes is the following picture:

But if you shoot with a camera, you can get this picture:

Or this picture:

The effect of the last two photos is invisible to the naked eye anyway. In addition, the camera can also change the lens, which greatly expands the depth and breadth of human image recording, such as:

Capsule:

Through the macro lens, you can enlarge the magnification. Look:

Another example is the following two examples:

The same water flow can be solidified instantly with a high-speed shutter:

A slow shutter will have the opposite effect:

These are all unobservable in the "limited horizon". Because the camera can set the focal length, aperture, shutter speed, white balance and other parameters separately, how many effects can these parameters be arranged and combined? Every effect is an inseparable part of the infinite world.