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Illusion - Is Seeing Really Believing?
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Illusion - Is Seeing Really Believing (1998)(Marshall Media)[Mac-PC].iso
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00122_Field_frep46.txt
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1996-12-30
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For centuries, similar hints
had come from clinical
neurology. A small stroke,
tumor, or injury to part of the
primary visual cortex can lead
to blindness in a small,
precisely demarcated island in
the visual field; we find
perfectly normal vision
elsewhere, instead of the
overall mild reduction in vision
that we might expect if each
cell communicated in some
measure with all other cells. To
digress slightly, we can note
here that such a stroke patient
may be unaware of anything
wrong, especially if the defect
is not in the foveal
representation of the cortex
and hence in the center of
gaze--at least he will not
perceive in his visual field an
island of blackness or greyness
or indeed anything at all. Even
if the injury has destroyed one
entire occipital lobe, leaving
the subject blind in the entire
half visual field on the other
side, the result is not any
active sensation of the world
being blotted out on that side.
My occasional migraine attacks
(luckily without the headache)
produce transient blindness,
often in a large part of one
visual field; if asked what I see
there, I can only say, literally,
nothing--not white, grey, or
black, but just what I see
directly behind--nothing.