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Imagine how easy it is to make something invisible on our normal light spectrum. All you have to do is cover it in reflective material. You will see everything around the object, but not the object.
originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
a reply to: IlluminatiTechnician
No criticism. Just sharing that some of us have screwed up vision. Sometimes we see things others don't see and sometimes we don't see at all.
originally posted by: IlluminatiTechnician
originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
a reply to: IlluminatiTechnician
No criticism. Just sharing that some of us have screwed up vision. Sometimes we see things others don't see and sometimes we don't see at all.
No criticism taken. That was a valid point actually. All visual sciences are based on optimal eyesight, this is why I forgot about those with, less than average eyesight.
What about eye floaters? A 2 year old would have no idea what those are, and sometimes they look like they're flying around.
originally posted by: NDMagoo
Wow, what a great idea! The sci-fi story pretty much writes itself. But maybe your son has better vision than you and your wife, and occasionally catches a glimpse of a big bird or faraway plane that you can't see. Or, if he's seeing these phantom planes only through windows, could there be reflections? And who knows, maybe they're ghost planes!
So you can see them looking at a blue sky, and what was the toddler looking at? A blue sky? Just a coincidence?
Eye floaters are small moving spots that appear in your field of vision. They may be especially noticeable when you look at something bright, such as white paper or a blue sky.