| Daniel Bennett St. John Roosa - 1894 - 728 pages
...its fellow. This can be readily seen by looking at a near object, and covering each eye alternately. The right eye will see more of the right side of the object, and the left eye more of the left side. It is the combination of these two different impressions that gives us our ideas of solidity and depth... | |
| Science - 1912 - 674 pages
...machinery. Now when a small solid object is viewed with both eyes, it is clear that the right eye must see more of the right side of the object and the left eye more of the left side. Therefore it is certain that the images on the two retinas can not be identical and therefore can not... | |
| Medicine - 1918 - 362 pages
...any solid object, such as a pillar . . . the right eye will see more of the right side and the left more of the left side. In the slightly dissimilar pictures thus focussed on the retina? the points of difference are not suppressed, as in the case of a person having only the second... | |
| Anna Verona Dorris - Public schools - 1928 - 514 pages
...principle that two eyes see better than one. Both eyes see the same object, but the right eye sees more of the right side of the object and the left eye more of the left side. The brain puts the two images together and sees the whole object. Thus we gain impressions of both... | |
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