Click on links for complete answers to your questions. Examples of blind scientists:
1. The sudden onset of blindness would be catastrophic for anyone, but it can be doubly poignant for a professional in the prime of a career. Physicist John Gardner, didn't let his blindness keep him from being able to continue his career and has turned disability into opportunity by developing a new kind of Braille that allows him to continue his research and teaching. His method also may help visually impaired children pursue careers in math and science.
2. To Sea with a Blind Scientist
by Geerat J. Vermeij
The reactions of my teachers in the local public elementary school ranged from polite acceptance to genuine enthusiasm when I told them of my intentions to become a conchologist, a malacologist, or a biologist. If they thought about the incompatibility between blindness and biology, they kept it to themselves, or perhaps they expected my obsession to be a passing fancy soon to be replaced by more realistic plans.
3. Experiences of a Blind Computer Scientist
Sangyun Hahn
I began to think that computer science may be a subject worth investing my life. I thought I was indebted to human society in various ways and I want to make contribution to society, and studying computer science might pave the way for it. This desire got me interested in computer, and its potential for contributions to humankind in general and people in the blind community advised me to pursue this career. So I applied for the computer science department in my university, worrying about being rejected for the reason that I am blind. To my surprise, I was accepted without much discussion.
4. CAREERS IN SCIENCE:
Opening New Vistas for Blind Scientists
Constance Holden
Innovations and gadgetry are offering a wealth of opportunities for scientists with disabilities (see main text), particularly for blind researchers.
5. Indian blind scientist leads google search for blinds--Hindustan visitor writes "Accessible Web Search is a feature of Google search. T.V. Raman, a senior research scientist at Google, is visually impaired and he has just led an exciting project for us called Google Accessible Search.
6. A melody of staccato piano notes sings out from the speakers of Victor K. Wong's desktop computer. But it is not a melody made by Bach, or Liberace, or even Alicia Keys. It is the melody of color.
Wong, a Cornell University graduate student from Hong Kong who lost his sight in a road accident at age seven, is helping to develop innovative software that translates color into sound. "Color is something that does not exist in the world of a blind person," explains Wong. "I could see before, so I know what it is. But there is no way that I can think of to give an exact idea of color to someone who has never seen before."
When you look at these sites, they explain what is used to substitute for sight.
2007-03-27 02:54:16
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answer #1
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answered by Deb 4
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when a scientist is born, then a great man or woman comes into the world, of course, little does the new baby know that he or she is a scientist. In time though this child knows he or she is someone who can unravel great metalic and mathamatical problems that ordinary and normal people are unable to do or duplicate. When a child is born a scientist, then it matters not much because a scientist who is born a scientist can decipher any problem no matter what because it is his mind and brain that solves the nearly impossible problems, so eyes don't much matter if the individual was born a scientist with a natural talent to discover the newest techologies in laws of physics. I hope you have a good answer here that I have done my best to do. Remember, only because a person is blind does not mean that he or she cannot do what other normal people can do. Thank you when you wear your sunglasses.
2007-03-26 05:52:46
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answer #2
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answered by Pink Honey 3
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Sure:
http://www.nfb.org/Images/nfb/Publications/books/kernel1/kern0610.htm
Done.
2007-03-26 11:12:50
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answer #3
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answered by Jerry P 6
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while faith is in scientists, it rather is not blind. those people have shown themselves to be sensible and dedicated, the two by way of incomes their ranges and by way of making verifiably real discoveries. faith in scientists is for that reason stated faith, in spite of however if a particular factor they let us know, which we have confidence, is real. (element in certainty, many atheists have confidence in the existence of the brontosaurus, as we've considered, because of the fact they study it in a technology e book.) regrettably, those people deny that their have confidence is unquestionably a sort of "faith." they think of the only faith is blind faith--that we are able to in basic terms have confidence somebody if we overlook concerning the excuses to not have confidence them. it rather is not real in any respect. many people do have blind faith--the Muslim terrorists have blind faith in Islam, working example. Many Christians, even, have blind faith. yet something people have stated faith. we've considered, by using good judgment and info, that God exists, and the Bible is real on particular factors; subsequently we have confidence that the Bible is real on different factors, and that people who've studied the Bible and faith--that's, the clergy--know what they are speaking approximately greater effective than laypeople like ourselves, and positively know what they are speaking approximately greater effective than atheists.
2016-10-19 23:22:16
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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vision is responsible for 90% of the info intake but other senses can be developed to a very high level of perfection which helps people to 'see' and test things that others omit and that's what science is mostly about
2007-03-26 16:59:28
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, there was one blinded with science back in the 1980s.
2007-03-27 16:17:58
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answer #6
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answered by Sarafina Chung 2
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i'd say yes. to make a great scientist they'd have to have a great mind.
2007-03-26 09:54:17
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answer #7
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answered by Homer 4
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