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Before you finish reading this sentence, approximately one hundred billion (100,000,000,000) operations will have been completed inside your eyes. However fantastic it may seem, you possess an example (two, in fact) of the Universe's ultimate technology. No scientist has ever come close to fully grasping it, let alone inventing anything remotely similar.
Whatever you have in your life is meaningful through your senses—vision and others. Your family, your house, your office, your friends and everything else in your surroundings, you quickly identify thanks to your vision. Without eyes, you could never get a quick, complete sense of everything that's happening around you. Without them, you could never imagine colors, forms, scenes, human faces, or what the word beauty means. But you do have eyes, and thanks to them, you can now read these printed words before you.

2007-07-23 10:14:40 · 12 answers · asked by THE WAY 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Nor does the act of vision cost you very much effort. To see an object, all you have to do is to turn your gaze at it. You don't need to bother giving "project, capture, and analyze" orders to your eyes, the components inside them, the optical nerves running to the back of your brain, nor to the brain itself. You need only look, just like the rest of the billions of creatures who have ever lived on our planet. Without having to work out the optical measurements, your eye's lens can focus onto distant objects. Without needing to accurately compute the precise contractions of various muscles surrounding the lens, you only desire to see, and within a fraction of a second, that process is carried out for you. Like many people, you may never have realized what a miracle it is that thousands of independent processes can operate in a perfect harmony to enable you to see.

2007-07-23 10:15:04 · update #1

Nor did you have to struggle to develop a pair of those wonderful instruments. At birth, your eyes came as standard equipment, with free installation and, unless you had a particular defect, in perfect working order. Since then, you're not likely to have felt any urge to ask the kind of questions you might upon receiving an expensive, anonymous gift, such as "Why did I get this?" or, "Who sent this to me?" or, "Exactly what do they want from me in return?." Be assured that the Creator, Who lent you this blessing, will call you to account when the contract ends—which is sooner than you imagine.
Those who best understand how irreplaceable this blessing is, are people who lose their eyesight later in life. In the possible event that you are struck blind, your long list of lifetime plans and ambitions will be sidelined by just one wish: To regain your lost eyesight.

2007-07-23 10:15:16 · update #2

Had you been blind all your life, since birth, and after an operation, you could see all of a sudden, the reverse would be no less dramatic. Without a doubt, no gift in the world would seem more valuable. You would experience no greater happiness than at the moment your bandages were removed, and on the days that followed.
At this very moment, if you are not acknowledging the unique blessing of your eyes to the Gracious One Who has granted it to you, then you are being deeply ungrateful—a state of mind that, unfortunately, is shared by a substantial part of humanity.

Say: "It is He Who brought you into being and gave you hearing, sight and hearts. What little thanks you show!" (Qur'an, 67: 23)

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2007-07-23 10:15:28 · update #3

12 answers

The eye evolved, it is no miracle.

2007-07-23 10:17:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Do you have an actual question here? Or did you just want to post a whole bunch of stuff about how great it is to have eyes?

If you are intending to present this as evidence of some kind of Divine Designer, then you fail to take into account the myriad transitional forms of eyes that do indeed exist in nature.

As remarkable as our eyes are, they are clearly the result of evolution, and not special creation. Otherwise, we would not require software correction to fix the imaging errors created by the way our optic nerve connects to the center of the retina (a bad design all the way around).

2007-07-23 10:20:44 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The eye evolved from photocells which increased in number as species evolved- eventually they needed to curve for a sense of direction. They HAVE explained this, you just keep reading biased antiscience books that attempt to prove established science wrong with dogma... something that doesn't work. Tell you what either find a testable occurance of creation in nature, or educate yourself OBJECTIVELY for a change. Then we'll talk.

2007-07-23 10:21:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The eye cannot 'evolve'
Evolution meaning the slow changing of something into something else.
Any eye has to be complete and fully functioning before it can even be called an 'eye'
No so called ' evolutionist' can answer this.
At what point does an AMOEBA develop an eye to become another life form?
It is unanswerable.
And if one type changes to another type...like a lion into a tiger...similar, both cats, WHY is it that after only one offspring...TION or LIGER...the animasl is rendered INFERTILE/
The Bible gives a simple answer...
(Genesis 1:21) And God proceeded to create the great sea monsters and every living soul that moves about, which the waters swarmed forth according to their kinds, and every winged flying creature according to its kind. And God got to see that [it was] good.

ACCORDING TO ITS KIND...

2007-07-23 10:37:07 · answer #4 · answered by pugjw9896 7 · 1 2

It was the great Muslim scholar Abu Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham who solved the mystery of vision and first described the workings of the eye in a modern, scientific sense.

Ibn al-Haytham’s massive book about light and vision, Kitāb al-Manāzir (Book of Optics), was translated into Latin as De aspectibus in the late thirteenth century in Spain. Copies of the book circulated throughout Europe. Roger Bacon wrote a summary of it entitled Perspectiva (Optics).

Born in Basra (located in what is now Iraq) in 965, Ibn al-Haytham—known in the West as Alhazen or Alhacen—wrote more than 200 books and treatises on a wide range of subjects. He was the first person to apply algebra to geometry, founding the branch mathematics known as analytic geometry.

Ibn al-Haytham created discreet, verifiable experiments to test the validity of ideas--a method of inquiry that came to be known as the scientific method. To test his hypothesis that “lights and colors do not blend in the air,” for example, Ibn al-Haytham devised the world's first camera obscura, observed what happened when light rays intersected at its aperture, and recorded the results. This is just one of dozens of “true demonstrations,” or experiments, contained in Kitāb al-Manāzir.

To read more about Ibn al-Haytham check out the source article or visit: http://www.ibnalhaytham.net/

2007-07-26 06:00:32 · answer #5 · answered by Centaur 6 · 0 0

a) Did you know we have a blind spot? If it's design, it's very poor design. Our retinas are backwards!
b) I am nearsighted. Why don't I have muscles to focus my eyes without glasses?
c) Why can't I see polarization patterns in the sky? Why can't I see farther into the ultraviolet?

2007-07-23 10:19:35 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Hi smiling are you pisces too? i saw 222 on your email
its amazing what the eyes can do and dont wear out for so long but cameras cant even do as much....ive got a deaf cousin who will enjoy hearing if he converts

2007-07-23 10:19:36 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

If god made our eyes then why did he give the common octopus better eyes than us?

2007-07-23 10:22:19 · answer #8 · answered by troythe9ine 2 · 1 0

Then why the blind spot, Peanut?

2007-07-23 10:19:30 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Everyone says I have my mom's eyes.

2007-07-23 10:20:26 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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