
Contents
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The man who learned how to see (but was disappointed with what he saw) The man who learned how to see (but was disappointed with what he saw)
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‘Now that I’ve felt it, I can see’: the case of S.B. ‘Now that I’ve felt it, I can see’: the case of S.B.
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Cheselden’s patient Cheselden’s patient
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After Cheselden: psychological inquiry into spatial perception after the recovery of sight After Cheselden: psychological inquiry into spatial perception after the recovery of sight
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Conclusion Conclusion
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3 Objects that ‘touch’d his eyes’: Surgical Experiments in the Recovery of Vision
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Published:April 2016
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Abstract
Although there were unsubstantiated reports of ‘couching’ cataracts in the Middle East and Medieval Europe, William Cheselden’s cataract surgery and report to the Royal Society in 1728 caused a surge of public interest in the dramatic realization, after bandages are removed, of what the formerly blind now ‘see’. The importance of this for Molyneux’s question is clear: now subjects with prolonged experience of blindness could answer the question directly. The chapter is bookended by a famous 1963 case study in the psychology of perception, Richard Gregory’s patient ‘S.B.’ who, in Gregory’s words, “learned how to see” after an operation to restore his vision, but then retreated into his familiar world of darkness thereafter.
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