Notes

 Posted by Rune on 01/07/2011
Jul 012011
 

The retinal image is an image in a mathematical sense; it is a projection or a mapping. The retinal image is not an image in the sense of a picture – or, if it is, this is entirely accidental. How it looks, or how it reads, plays no role in its performance of its neurophysiological job description. Once we appreciate that the retinal image isn’t something that we see, we lose a grip even on what it means to say that it is upside-down. Upside-down, one must ask relative to what? Who’s to say what counts as upside-down in the head relative to the tasks faced by the nervous system?
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Again, we don’t experience the retinal image; we don’t experience any image , in that sense. We experience the world.

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The Retinal Image is Unstable

 Posted by Rune on 10/02/2010
Feb 102010
 

“The Retinal Image is Unstable Matters are made worse by the fact that the eyes move almost continuously. Several times a second they jitter and bounce; they also make saccades and micro-saccades-that is, sharp, ballistic movements. As a result, the projection of an object you perceive to be still in facts jumps around on your [...]

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