kind of going back to what i was talking about the other day...if someone is lacking a sense, they view the world differently than we do. literally, in this case. if someone was blind, but only in one eye, then their monocular and binocular cues would be affected. your monocular cues say that each eye recives slightly different images. your binocular cues include the retinal disparity, or the difference in images, which allows your brain to create 3-dimensional images. this is all under the deoth perception aspect of perceptual organization. i wonder then, how a person who is blind in only one eye would interpret an optical illusion. would it seem to be just another drawing or picture? or would they still receive the stimuli from it to know that it was an illusion, but see a completely different illusion than what i see? how would i know that their view wasn't the right view?

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