Richard
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2005
- Messages
- 9,076
- Location
- West Coast Resistance
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Ack...city life
Given: binoculars are fully operational and properly focused and adjusted.
What is happening when I view a distant object through the binoculars and to compensate for that certain part of my field of vision which is obscured by the binos (between the barrels) I 'extend' my focus onto the distant object to make the obscured part 'disappear'?
Is it my brain canceling out the obscuration? Or is it my eyes increasing their focus?
I understand the eyes are such an integral part of the brain that a true depiction of the brain would include the eyes and optic nerves.
What is happening when I view a distant object through the binoculars and to compensate for that certain part of my field of vision which is obscured by the binos (between the barrels) I 'extend' my focus onto the distant object to make the obscured part 'disappear'?
Is it my brain canceling out the obscuration? Or is it my eyes increasing their focus?
I understand the eyes are such an integral part of the brain that a true depiction of the brain would include the eyes and optic nerves.