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THE
CURE OF IMPERFECT SIGHT BY
TREATMENT WITHOUT GLASSES
CHAPTER
16
THE
ILLUSIONS OF IMPERFECT AND OF NORMAL SIGHT
Persons
with imperfect sight always have illusions of vision; so do persons with
normal sight. But while the illusions of normal sight are an evidence
of relaxation, the illusions of imperfect sight are an evidence of strain.
Some persons with errors of refraction have few illusions, others have
many; because the strain which causes the error of refraction is not the
same strain that is responsible for the illusions.
The
illusions of imperfect sight may relate to the color, size, location and
form of the objects regarded. They may include appearances of things that
have no existence at all, and various other curious and interesting manifestations.
ILLUSIONS
OF COLOR
When a patient regards a black letter and believes it to be grey, yellow,
brown, blue, or green, he is suffering from an illusion of color. This
phenomenon differs from colorblindness. The color-blind person is unable
to differentiate between different colors, usually blue and green, and
his inability to do so is constant. The person suffering from an illusion
of color does not see the false colors constantly or uniformly. When he
looks at the Snellen test card the black letters may appear to him at
one time to be grey; but at another moment they may appear to be a shade
of yellow, blue, or brown. Some patients always see the black letters
red; to others they appear red only occasionally. Although the letters
are all of the same color, some may see the large letters black and the
small ones yellow or blue. Usually the large letters are seen darker than
the small ones, whatever color they appear to be. Often different colors
appear in the same letter, part of it seeming to be black, perhaps, and
the rest grey or some other color. Spots of black, or of color, may appear
on the white; and spots of white, or of color, on the black.
ILLUSIONS
OF SIZE
Large letters may appear small, or small letters large. One letter may
appear to be of normal size, while another of the same size and at the
same distance may appear larger or smaller than normal. Or a letter may
appear to be of normal size at the near-point and at the distance, and
only half that size at the middle distance. When a person can judge the
size of a letter correctly at all distances up to twenty feet his vision
is normal. If the size appears different to him at different distances,
he is suffering from an illusion of size. At great distances the judgment
of size is always imperfect, because the sight at such distances is imperfect,
even though perfect at ordinary distances. The stars appear to be dots,
because the eye does not possess perfect vision for objects at such distances.
A candle seen half a mile away appears smaller than at the near-point;
but seen through a telescope giving perfect vision at that distance it
will be the same as at the near-point. With improved vision the ability
to judge size improves.
The
correction of an error of refraction by glasses seldom enables the patient
to judge size as correctly as the normal eye does, and the ability to
do this may differ very greatly in persons having the same error of refraction.
A person with ten diopters of myopia corrected by glasses may (rarely)
be able to judge the sizes of objects correctly. Another person, with
the same degree of myopia and the same glasses, may see them only one-half
or one-third their normal size. This indicates that errors of refraction
have very little to do with incorrect perceptions of size.
ILLUSIONS
OF FORM
Round letters may appear square or triangular; straight letters may appear
curved; letters of regular form may appear very irregular; a round letter
may appear to have a checkerboard or a cross in the center. In short,
an infinite variety of changing forms may be seen. Illumination, distance
and environment are all factors in this form of imperfect sight. Many
persons can see the form of a letter correctly when other letters are
covered, but when the other letters are visible they cannot see it. The
indication of the position of a letter by a pointer helps some people
to see it. Others are so disturbed by the pointer that they cannot see
the letter so well.
ILLUSIONS
OF NUMBER
Multiple images are frequently seen by persons with imperfect sight, either
with both eyes together, with each eye separately, or with only one eye.
The manner in which these multiple images make their appearance is sometimes
very curious. For instance, a patient with presbyopia read the word HAS
normally with both eyes. The word PHONES he read correctly with the left
eye; but when he read it with the right eye he saw the letter P double,
the imaginary image being a little distance to the left of the real one.
The left eye, while it had normal vision for the word PHONES, multiplied
the-shaft of a pin when this object was in a vertical position (the head
remaining single), and multiplied the head when the position was changed
to the horizontal (the shaft then remaining single). When the point of
the pin was placed below a very small letter, the point was sometimes
doubled while the letter remained single. No error of refraction can account
for these phenomena. They are tricks of the mind only. The ways in which
multiple images are arranged are endless. They are sometimes placed vertically,
sometimes horizontally or obliquely, and sometimes in circles, triangles
and other geometrical forms. Their number, too, may vary from two to three,
four, or more. They may be stationary, or may change their position more
or less rapidly. They also show an infinite variety of color, including
a white even whiter than that of the background.
ILLUSIONS
OF LOCATION
A period following a letter on the same horizontal level as the bottom
of the letter may appear to change its position in a great variety of
curious ways. Its distance from the letter may vary. It may even appear
on the other side of the letter. It may also appear above or below the
line. Some persons see letters arranged in irregular order. In the case
of the word AND, for instance, the D may occupy the place of the N. or
the first letter may change places with the last. All these things are
mental illusions. The letters sometimes appear to be farther off than
they really are. The small letters, twenty feet distant, may appear to
be a mile away. Patients troubled by illusions of distance sometimes ask
if the position of the card has not been changed.
ILLUSIONS
OF NON-EXISTENT OBJECTS
When the eye has imperfect sight the mind not only distorts what the eye
sees, but it imagines that it sees things that do not exist. Among illusions
of this sort are the floating specks which so often appear before the
eyes when the sight is imperfect, and even when it is ordinarily very
good. These specks are known scientifically as "muscae volitantes,"
or "flying flies," and although they are of no real importance,
being symptoms of nothing except mental strain, they have attracted so
much attention, and usually cause so much alarm to the patient, that they
will be discussed at length in another chapter.
ILLUSIONS
OF COMPLEMENTARY COLORS
When the sight is imperfect the subject, on looking away from a black,
white, or brightly colored object, and closing the eyes, often imagines
for a few seconds that he sees the object in a complementary, or approximately
complementary, color. If the object is black upon a white background,
a white object upon a black background will be seen. If the object is
red, it may be seen as blue; and if it is blue, it may appear to be red.
These illusions, which are known as "after-images," may also
be seen, though less commonly, with the eyes open, upon any background
at which the subject happens to look, and are often so vivid that they
appear to be real.
ILLUSIONS
OP THE COLOR OF THE SUN
Persons with normal sight see the sun white, the whitest white there is;
but when the sight is imperfect it may appear to be any color in the spectrum
- red, blue, green, purple, yellow, etc. In fact, it has even been described
by persons with imperfect vision as totally black. The setting sun commonly
appears to be red, because of atmospheric conditions; but in many cases
these conditions are not such as to change the color, and while this still
appears to be red to persons with imperfect vision, to persons with normal
vision it appears to be white. When the redness of a red sun is an illusion,
and not due to atmospheric conditions, its image on the ground glass of
a camera will be white, not red, and the rays focussed with a burning
glass will also be white. The same is true of a red moon.
BLIND
SPOTS AFTER LOOKING AT THE SUN
After looking at the sun most people see black or colored spots which
may last from a few minutes to a year or longer, but are never permanent.
These spots are also illusions, and are not due, as is commonly supposed,
to any organic change in the eye. Even the total blindness which sometimes
results, temporarily, from looking at the sun, is only an illusion.
ILLUSIONS
OF TWINKLING STARS
The idea that the stars should twinkle has been embodied in song and story,
and is generally accepted as part of the natural order of things; but
it can be demonstrated that this appearance is simply an illusion of the
mind.
CAUSE
OF THE ILLUSIONS OF IMPERFECT SIGHT
All the illusions of imperfect sight are the result of a strain of the
mind, and when the mind is disturbed for any reason illusions of all kinds
are very likely to occur. This strain is not only different from the strain
that produces the error of refraction, but it can be demonstrated that
for each and every one of these illusions there is a different kind of
strain. Alterations of color do not necessarily affect the size or form
of objects, or produce any other illusion, and it is possible to see the
color of a letter, or of a part of a letter, perfectly, without recognizing
the letter. To change black letters into blue, or yellow, or another color,
requires a subconscious strain to remember or imagine the colors concerned,
while to alter the form requires a subconscious strain to see the form
in question. With a little practice anyone can learn to produce illusions
of form and color by straining consciously in the same way that one strains
unconsciously; and whenever illusions are produced in this way it will
be found that eccentric fixation and an error of refraction have also
been produced.
The
strain which produces polyopia is different again from the strain which
produces illusions of color, size and form. After a few attempts most
patients easily learn to produce polyopia at will. Staring or squinting,
if the strain is great enough, will usually make one see double. By looking
above a light, or a letter, and then trying to see it as well as when
directly regarded, one can produce an illusion of several lights, or letters,
arranged vertically. If the strain is great enough, there may be as many
as a dozen of them. By looking to the side of the light or letter, or
looking away obliquely at any angle, the images can be made to arrange
themselves horizontally, or obliquely at any angle.
To
see objects in the wrong location, as when the first letter of a word
occupies the place of the last, requires an ingenuity of eccentric fixation
and an education of the imagination which is unusual.
The
black or colored spots seen after looking at the sun, and the strange
colors which the sun sometimes seems to assume, are also the result of
the mental strain. When one becomes able to look at the orb of day without
strain, these phenomena immediately disappear.
After-images
have been attributed to fatigue of the retina, which is supposed to have
been so overstimulated by a certain color that it can no longer perceive
it, and therefore seeks relief in the hue which is complementary to this
color. If it gets tired looking at the black C on the Snellen test card,
for instance, it is supposed to seek relief by seeing the C white. This
explanation of the phenomenon is very ingenious but scarcely plausible.
The eyes cannot see when they are closed;; and if they appear to see under
these conditions, it is obvious that the subject is suffering from a mental
illusion with which the retina has nothing to da. Neither can they see
what does not exist; and if they appear to see a white C on a green wall
where there is no such object, it is obvious again that the subject is
suffering from a mental illusion. The after-image indicates, in fact,
simply a loss of mental control, and occurs when there is an error of
refraction, because this condition also is due to a loss of mental control.
Anyone can produce an afterimage at will by trying to see the big C all
alike - that is, under a strain; but one can look at it indefinitely by
central fixation without any such result.
While
persons with imperfect sight usually see the stars twinkle, they do not
necessarily do so. Therefore it is evident that the strain which causes
the twinkling is different from that which causes the error of refraction.
If one can look at a star without trying to see it, it does not twinkle;
and when the illusion of twinkling has been produced, one can usually
stop it by "swinging" the star. On the other hand, one can start
the planets, or even the moon, to twinkling, if one strains sufficiently
to see them.
ILLUSIONS
OF NORMAL SIGHT
The illusions of normal sight include all the phenomena of central fixation.
When the eye with normal sight looks at a letter on the Snellen test card,
it sees the point fixed best,- and everything else in the field of vision
appears less distinct. As a matter of fact, the whole letter and all the
letters may be perfectly black and distinct, and the impression that one
letter is blacker than the others, or that one part of a letter is blacker
than the rest, is an illusion. The normal eye, however, may shift so rapidly
that it appears to see a whole line of small letters all alike simultaneously.
As a matter of fact there is, of course, no such picture on the retina.
Each letter has not only been seen separately, but it has been demonstrated
in the chapter on "Shifting and Swinging" that if the letters
are seen at a distance of fifteen or twenty feet, they could not be recognized
unless about four shifts were made on each letter. To produce the impression
of a simultaneous picture of fourteen letters, therefore, some sixty or
seventy pictures, each with some one point more distinct than the rest,
must have been produced upon the retina. The idea that the letters are
seen all alike simultaneously is, therefore, an illusion. Here we have
two different kinds of illusions. In the first case the impression made
upon the brain is in accordance with the picture on the retina, but not
in accordance with the fact. In the second the mental impression is in
accordance with the fact, but not with the pictures upon the retina.
The
normal eye usually sees the background of a letter whiter than it really
is. In looking at the letters on the Snellen test card it sees white streaks
at the margins of the letters, and in reading fine print it sees between
the lines and the letters, and in the openings of the letters, a white
more intense than the reality. Persons who cannot read fine print may
see this illusion, but less clearly. The more clearly it is seen, the
better the vision; and if it can be imagined consciously - it is imagined
unconsciously when the sight is normal - the vision improves. If the lines
of fine type are covered, the streaks between them disappear. When the
letters are regarded through a magnifying glass by the eye with normal
sight, the illusion is not destroyed, but the intensity of the white and
black are lessened. With imperfect sight it may be increased to some extent
by this means, but will remain less intense than the white and black seen
by the normal eye. The facts demonstrate that perfect sight cannot be
obtained with glasses.
The
illusions of movement produced by the shifting of the eye and described
in detail in the chapter on "Shifting and Swinging" must also
be numbered among the illusions of normal sight, and so must the perception
of objects in an upright position. This last is the most curious illusion
of all. No matter what the position of the head, and regardless of the
fact that the image on the retina is inverted, we always see things right
side up.
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