[accessibleimage] Flesh that Sees
- From: Lisa Yayla <fnugg@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2006 12:42:42 +0100
excerpt from article
http://www.chabad.org/magazine/article.asp?AID=456045
Flesh that Sees
By Arnie Gotfryd
Scientists studying perception at the Wisconsin Medical School have come
up with a new technology that allows blind people to "see" well enough
to catch a ball, walk around obstacles, play rock-paper-scissors, and
watch a video. The device, called a Brain Port, bypasses the eyes
entirely and provides a clear representation of the outside world using
gentle electric stimulation of the skin.
How does it work? A small video camera is strapped onto the forehead of
the patient to record how the scene changes as he moves. The video
output is wired to an image converter that translates the picture into a
pattern of electrical charges on a flat patch of plastic which can be
placed on the tongue, stomach or abdomen. At first it feels strange, but
within 20 minutes, patients have learned to completely substitute the
flesh stimulation for eyesight. This effect resembles vision so closely
that the visual cortex of the brain is harnessed to process these
tactile sensations.
One of the side benefits of this technology is that it helps us better
understand a prophecy for the Days of Moshiach which we recite every
Shabbat when we remove the Torah scroll from the Ark. The quote, from
Isaiah 40:5 is, "And together all flesh shall see that the mouth of G-d
has spoken."
The Lubavitcher Rebbe points out that this verse refers not to eyes of
flesh but rather to the flesh itself seeing the word of G-d that creates
and sustains each thing from nothing to something constantly. Of course,
we cannot yet see the Divine life force in creation, but we do now have
proof that flesh itself has the ability to see. We've already got the
receiver to pick up the signal once the revelation occurs.1
Tne "Brain Port"
Another interesting lesson from this technology is how it has changed
our understanding of how the senses work. People used to think that
vision was about the eye and brain processing a sequence of pictures.
Now, however, citing research such as this, scientists believe that
perceiving is not so much about sights and sounds but actually about
processing symbolic information, much like reading words in a book.
FOOTNOTES
1. It is interesting to note that some 35 years before the Brain
Port was invented, a science fiction writer, Don J. Fretland, dreamed up
the very same device and wrote about it in his novel, The Persimmon
Sequence. It would be safe to assume that Isaiah was not less wise nor
less prescient than Mr. Fretland. The question is only one of timing.
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