Re: Halos
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Re: Halos
| Neil Brooks | 19 May 2008 17:40 |
On May 19, 10:23 am, otisbr...@embarqmail.com wrote:
> Dear Zetsu, > > Subject: Bates, and YOUR credibility. The irony is unbelievable.
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| otisbrown@embarqmail.com | 19 May 2008 17:23 |
Dear Zetsu,
Subject: Bates, and YOUR credibility.
I have seen this before. Posting WONDEUL statement about how you got to PERFECT vision, of 20/15 and 20/10.
Then you berate an ophthalmologist for NOT doing that.
Then when asked to do is yourself -- you sit on your butt and don't do anything.
I do not think Bates is discredited. I think it is his "followers" who, by their lack of self-checking discredit Bates.
It is like an obese kid -- that complains about being obese -- and blames some one "medical" -- when, he will not:
1. Weigh himself (read Snellen),
2. An work on losing weight -- under HIS control.
This effort to "pass" responsibility "somewhere else" -- is at the root of the obesity problem.
For that reasion I suggest:
Have you checked your Snellen?
http://www.smbs.buffalo.edu/oph/ped/IVAC/IVAC.html
You have cried "wolf" once too often.
Just my second-opinion on "Bates People",
But, not all are like Zetsu -- but ....
Enjoy,
> [...Halos > [quoted text clipped - 23 lines] > > - Dr. W.H. Bates, February 1920 |
| Zetsu | 19 May 2008 15:50 |
[...Halos
When the eye with normal sight looks at the large letters on the Snellen test card, at any distance, from twenty feet to six inches or less, it sees, at the inner and outer edges and in the openings of the round letters, a white more intense than the margin of the card. Similarly, when such an eye reads fine print, the spaces between the lines and the letters and the openings of the letters appear whiter than the margin of the page, while streaks of an even more intense white may be seen along the edges of the lines of letters. These "halos" are sometimes seen so vividly that in order to convince people that they are illusions it is often necessary to cover the letters, when they at once disappear. Patients with imperfect sight also see the halos, though less perfectly, and when they understand that they are imagined, they often become able to imagine them where they had not been seen before, or to increase their vividness, in which case the sight always improves. This can be done by imagining the appearances first with the eyes closed; and then looking at the card, or at fine print, and imagining them there. By alternating these two acts of imagination the sight is often improved rapidly. It is best to begin the practice at the point at which the halos are seen, or can be imagined best. Nearsighted patients are usually able to see them at the near-point, sometimes very vividly. Farsighted people may also see them best at this point, although their sight for form may be best at the distance...]
- Dr. W.H. Bates, February 1920
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