(June 1, 2017 at 6:37 am)ignoramus Wrote: OK guys ...Listen up ... This one's freaky! There is no correct answer .... (unknowable?)
You know the way our eyes are designed where images actually reach our optic nerve upside down and our brain does the decoding.
Some university did a test by letting participants wear special glasses which flipped the images in front of them.
It took the brain about 2 days to compensate for this and flip the flipped images back again.
On the conclusion of the test, it took a couple of days again for things to go back to normal.
My question is: When a newborn baby opens his/hers eyes up for the first time to see mummy, does he see mummy upside down for a while until the brain learns to compensate?
Or is the programming in our dna?
Your welcome.
I think they initially only see unrecognizeable blurs; light and motion.
But still, those could be upside down
"If we go down, we go down together!"
- Your mum, last night, suggesting 69.
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- Your mum, last night, suggesting 69.
![[Image: 41bebac06973488da2b0740b6ac37538.jpg]](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/41/be/ba/41bebac06973488da2b0740b6ac37538.jpg)