h a l f b a k e r yAlas, poor spelling!
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If I hold a magnifying glass at arm's length, the image is flipped, and clear. It shouldn't be too hard to shape a lens that you get and inverted image right by your eye. That way, the floor is on the top and vice versa. This would make just about everything to harder to do, but then you have the bragging
rights of saying you can do things upsidedown. These might be better as goggles, so you don't get the conflicting peripheral vision.
here's something for you finrod. do you have fincones too?
http://www.physlink...skExperts/ae353.cfm [po, May 28 2005]
George Stratton did it first
http://www.cns.nyu....pers/Damian_SPF.pdf But these guys reversed left/right only [Ling, May 30 2005]
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The human brain is the most complex system in the universe, including the structure of the universe. Newborn babies "see" the world sort of sideways untill their brains get used to it. |
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So, an experiment went like this: Give a guy a pair of glasses that make him see the world upside down. After a while his brain starts to compensate and he will again see things the "right" way. BUT, then he takes his new glasses of and he sees things upside down! |
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Sounds like trying to ride a bicycle with your hands on the opposite sides - you'll probably have some form of accident before "compensating" |
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Do you have a link for that [zeno]? Sounds interesting, but kind of pokes a hole right through my idea. |
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I can't find the link either, but remember seeing a documentary about what [Zeno]'s talking about, it's clever stuff. |
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That's cool. Now I really want to try this. |
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I had to read it twice before I got the pun, [po]. |
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//The human brain is the most complex system in the universe, including the structure of the universe.// |
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fin, a pun? more curiosity. |
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Rods, cones, eyes, [finrod]. There's some bit of humor there. I think. Maybe it's just me. |
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Ill vouch for the experiment. In fourth grade my teacher brought in a pair of flip glasses to illustrate the way things appear before your brain back-flips. I had heard of the experiment and was allowed to try it. It took almost three days of wearing the glasses for things to appear right side up, and about 1-1/2 days to correct. Though interesting to try, it caused painful headaches, and the changes were not immediate. There were several hours where the image would flip back and forth before appearing upright, which I didnt enjoy. It felt like being cross-eyed and seasick at the same time. |
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I am actually undergoing this experiment
in a few months with an old high school
teacher. Glad to know that someone can
vouch for it before I make myself
extremely ill, [Shz]! But yes, this is baked... |
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//But yes, this is baked...// |
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Awww. Then does anyone know where I could get a pair of these? |
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There was a high school professor by
the name of James Matiya who was
selling these a while back ($40, or $80
for extended peripheral vision).
However, I don't think he's still selling
them (I recently e-mailed him, will let
you know of the outcome). |
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He claimed to do it with "two inverted
prisms", and some research shows that
it could be done with a thin enough
Dove prism. I also sent an e-mail off to
an optics specialist who should be
replying by the end of the week. I'll
keep in touch with whatever I find out. |
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As an aside, this is already the first
result on google for "flip vision". |
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