Somewhat related is an observation I've made as a contact lens wearer. If I remove one contact lens, you would imagine the myopic vision in one eye and corrected vision in the other would confuse my brain. Instead, however, the corrected vision over-rides the blurred, causing me to see perfectly well out of one eye including in the middle of the vision (equivalent to covering the other eye).
Giving it some thought, I did not consider that maybe I've always noted this while wearing a contact in my dominant (right) eye. I will have to see if the corrected vision is still somehow dominant if the lens remains in my non-dominant eye. If so, it makes you wonder how my subconscious knows to focus on the clearer image instead of treating them as equally valid.
And Lori, eye dominance causes those pentagons to not be symmetrical. Not that it changes your question but it's just a consideration.
Giving it some thought, I did not consider that maybe I've always noted this while wearing a contact in my dominant (right) eye. I will have to see if the corrected vision is still somehow dominant if the lens remains in my non-dominant eye. If so, it makes you wonder how my subconscious knows to focus on the clearer image instead of treating them as equally valid.
And Lori, eye dominance causes those pentagons to not be symmetrical. Not that it changes your question but it's just a consideration.
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