I think it does bear a relationship, but that relationship isn't necessarily obvious to someone seeing for the first time.Maia wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2025 2:02 pmI like the fact that they finally managed to answer it, after hundreds of years.Flannel Jesus wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2025 11:25 am While we're talking about Blindness, here's an interesting thought experiment (turned real experiment):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molyneux%27s_problem
Basically, the thought experiment goes like this: take a blind person who is familiar by touch with various shapes, eg squares circles triangles stars. This blind person knows what they feel like and can distinguish between them easily by touch, but of course they've never seen these shapes.
Now give that blind person sight and ask them, using sight alone, to say which one is the square, the circle, the triangle or the star.
To most sighted people it seems intuitively like that shouldn't be particularly hard -- that the visual experience of these shapes matches the tactile experience in an obvious and intuitive way that even a person who is seeing for the first time should understand. But the reality is more complex apparently.
The 3D mental map I have in my mind of shapes, places and so on probably bears little or no relation to what they look like.
I mean, someone who's seen for their whole life can feel a shape they've never felt before, and could probably have a good guess on what that shape looks like.
But someone who has never seen has never excercised those mental muscles to understand how those things relate to each other. What's odd is, to a sighted person, it seems like it should be obvious, even to someone who's only just begun seeing, but regardless of how it seems to us, it's just not the case. And that raises some interesting questions I think.