I find this to be quite fascinating...
The following is a gif of the diamond (or sapphire) tip of an audio stylus traveling through the grooves of a vinyl record as seen by an electron microscope...

Now, setting aside the fact that there is a pretty good "scientific explanation" for how it all works, let's assume for the sake of the point I'm about to make that the record groove at the point of contact with the stylus is some climactic moment in a piece of music performed by a symphony orchestra.
In which case, I find it almost impossible to understand how that tiny pointed spike of either diamond or sapphire - scribbling through that tiny groove of poly-vinyl plastic - could not only reproduce the not-so-subtle (yet hearable) tone variances between, say, a piano, violins, cellos, double basses, flutes, oboes, French horns, timpani, cymbals, and perhaps even a choir, etc., etc...
...but reproduce them as they are all occurring "simultaneously" to one another.
It almost seems as if the universe...
(or some vast intelligence behind the universe)
...is saying:
"...look, just do this, this, and this with these material substances (plastic, diamond, metal, along with some electronic razzmatazz) to make the illusion look convincing, and I (the universe/God) will do what's necessary to make the illusion work for you idiots..."
Again, it doesn't matter what human science has to say about it, just look at the gif and try to wrap your mind around how so many distinctly unique (again, "simultaneously" playing) instrumental tones could emerge from what you are seeing.
Anyway, I just thought that was something interesting to think about.
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