Raise a finger to about four inches in front of your nose. Focus on some object in the distance, then -- without changing your focus -- shift your attention back to your finger. Does it seem doubled? Most people claim to be able to experience this, at least after a few tries.
If you then focus carefully on your finger (bringing it out maybe to six or eight inches, depending on how close in you're able to bring your focus), do the objects in the far distance seem unfocused, blurry? Even doubled? Reports of doubling in this case are less common, but I think I can get some doubling in myself in this condition.
One of the great geniuses of the 19th century, a pivotal figure in physics and physiology and psychology, Hermann von Helmholtz writes:
When a person's attention is directed for the first time to the double images in binocular vision, he is usually greatly astonished to think that he had never noticed them before, especially when he reflects that the only objects he has ever seen single were those few that happened at the moment to be about as far from his eyes as the point of fixation. The great majority of objects, comprising all those that were farther or nearer than this point, were all seen double (1910/1962, III.7).
The eminent 18th-century philosopher Thomas Reid writes:
We find that when the eyes are sound and perfect, and the axes of both directed to one point, an object placed in that point is seen single.... Other objects at the same distance from the eyes as that to which their axes are directed do also appear single.... Objects which are much nearer to the eyes, or much more distant from them, than that to which the two eyes are directed, appear double. Thus, if the candle is placed at the distance of ten feet, and I hold my finger at arms-length between my eyes and the candle; when I look at the candle, I see my finger double; and when I look at my finger, I see the candle double: and the same thing happens with regard to all other objects at like distances which fall within the sphere of vision.... You may find a man that can say with good conscience, that he never saw things double all his life; yet this very man, put in the situation above mentioned, with his finger between him and candle, and desired to attend to the appearance of the object which he does not look at, will, upon the first trial, see the candle double, when he looks at his finger; and his finger double, when he looks at the candle. Does he now see otherwise than he saw before? No, surely; but he now attends to what he never attended to before. The same double appearance of an object hath been a thousand times presented to his eye before now; but he did not attend to it; and so it is as little an object of his reflection and memory, as if it had never happened (1764/1997, p. 133-134).
E.B. Titchener, the leading American introspective psychologist circa 1900 (second in eminence only to William James), writes:
The field of vision … shows a good deal of doubling: the tip of the cigar in your mouth splits into two, the edge of the open door wavers into two, the ropes of the swing, the telegraph pole, the stem of another, nearer tree, all are doubled. So long, that is, as the eyes are at rest, only certain objects in the field are seen single; the rest are seen double.... Our habitual disregard ot double images is one of the curiosities of binocular vision (1910, p. 309).
I assume most people now would not agree with such claims.
What's going on? Are these guys, despite their reputations -- and despite Helmholtz's and Titchener's many subtle and interesting introspective discoveries -- simply bad introspectors? I can barely get any doubling, I think, except in the most extreme conditions. I focus on the bookshelf four feet away; the door handle ten feet away seems not at all doubled. Have they unwittingly trained themselves to see double? If so, do they really see most things double, most of the time?
Maybe, I -- we? -- are the bad introspectors? Yet I find it very difficult to imagine that I'm wrong about the singular appearance of that doorknob....
9 comments:
I tend to agree with Helmholtz, Titchener, and Reid. I agree that I don't seem to be going around "seeing double" most of the time, but I do notice double images when I shift my attention away from the point of focus. I think the reason we don't notice them is that we usually pay attention only to what we're focused on, and what we focus on never seems doubled. The doubling would occur mostly in peripheral vision, which we normally don't pay attention to. And when we do pay attention to it, it is hard to grasp or determine what is seen--think of Dennett's card-guessing experiment from Consciousness Explained. If the doubling occurs in that part of the visual field, where the perceptual contents are so vague, I think it seems perfectly natural that the doubling would go unnoticed.
I can see the doubling easily too, whenever I focus my eyes on a small object less than 1-2 meters away and try simultaneously to pay attention to objects in the background.
Thanks, quirinius and alejandro! Maybe I shouldn't take for granted that people won't agree with Helmholtz et al.! Your reasons, quirinius, explaining why we might not notice such doubling, are very sensible.
In my own case, I'd report the surprising vagueness of things in peripheral vision (such as in Dennett's playing card experiment, where you slowly rotate an unknown playing card toward the center of your visual field while your eyes stay focused straight ahead) but even when I separate attention from visual focus, I'm not inclined to report much doubling. So (in my case at least) there's a disanalogy between the cases.
But now I'm wondering to what extent I might be unusual. I had lazy eye as a kid and my left eye is still unusually dominant over my right, and maybe that makes a difference.
Eye dominance would have a big effect on this phenomenon. It can also be seen by holding a finger close to your face and alternately switching between one eye open while the other is closed. The finger should appear to move in relation to your vision. If one eye is dominant then you'll be getting a mostly monocular view from one eye when you're attempting the doubling experiment
Perhaps it's because I grew up with progressive myopia that peaked at near-blind levels when uncorrected(20/800). But I've always been aware of how easily vision is doubled, or at least unfocused, outside of one's field of focus.
Also, the candle/hand experiment appears to describe a situation with a very limited range of objects in sight, with exacerbates the effect, as does focusing on a very close object such as one's finger as you describe.
I tend to notice it when there's a piece of sap or something right in the middle of my windshield when I'm driving, and it looks like it's to the left AND right of the car in front of me.
I can see doubles too. I can make double both close objects and distant objects such as looking at a bridge a distance away and double it. I cant fully double up the large distant objects such as a building but they double to about half and all windows in it double. I experimented with double finger. If you try touch one or the other of the "twins" with say a pen, which also doubles, what happens is that, say right "twin" of the pen can touch the right finger of 1st hand, left simultaneously will contact too. But if you try to touch left finger twin with right pen twin it will just pass through, the same is if you try to touch the right finger with left pen twin it will pass through. In other words, the right pen can touch only the right finger, the left pen can touch the left finger, but not left-right and right left - in this attempt both finger twins are as if not real and pen passes through them. Weird. But if you look at doubled finger and close one eye, one finger disappears, you close another eye, the previous finger reappears and the other one reappears. It seems we are able to see double because we are looking through two "cameras" (eyes). But which one of them is the "real" one, lol? Either one seems nonexistent depending on which eye you close.
Why are only some people able to recognise that there are two things behing the thing we are focusing on or vice versa.some are not able to identify this state ..why so ?
This is normal, everybody see this
I notice when I'm using cellphone
More noticeable with objects close to your eyes
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