The Seeing Eye H Asher
The Seeing Eye H Asher front cover used secondhand nonfiction book
The Seeing Eye back cover used nonfiction second hand book

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The Seeing Eye

Author: H Asher
$20.95 2095
Out of Stock
Book Title
The Seeing Eye
Author
H Asher
Book Condition
GOOD - previous owner's name & address and dustjacket has been covered with clear adhesive plastic (contact)
Book Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Gerald Duckworth & Co
Year Published
1961
This book deals in popular terms with some of the phenomena and problems of vision, particularly those which the author has himself studied as a university research worker. After a simple account of the eye, its relation to the brain and to the act of seeing, the author describes his own work on the problems of eye-testing, eye-strain and binocular defects; and in so doing gives a first-hand impression of what life in a modern research laboratory is like in its successes, failures, planned experiments and surprise improvisations. In addition he includes a long chapter on his unpleasant experiences after a dose of lysergic acid. Varied, idiosyncratic and comprehensively illustrated with diagrams by Charles Philipson, this book gives an unusual close-up picture of a modern scientist at work. The author belongs to the Physiology Department of the University of Birmingham.

This book deals in popular terms with some of the phenomena and problems of vision, particularly those which the author has himself studied as a university research worker. After a simple account of the eye, its relation to the brain and to the act of seeing, the author describes his own work on the problems of eye-testing, eye-strain and binocular defects; and in so doing gives a first-hand impression of what life in a modern research laboratory is like in its successes, failures, planned experiments and surprise improvisations. In addition he includes a long chapter on his unpleasant experiences after a dose of lysergic acid.

Varied, idiosyncratic and comprehensively illustrated with diagrams by Charles Philipson, this book gives an unusual close-up picture of a modern scientist at work. The author belongs to the Physiology Department of the University of Birmingham.

This book deals in popular terms with some of the phenomena and problems of vision, particularly those which the author has himself studied as a university research worker. After a simple account of the eye, its relation to the brain and to the act of seeing, the author describes his own work on the problems of eye-testing, eye-strain and binocular defects; and in so doing gives a first-hand impression of what life in a modern research laboratory is like in its successes, failures, planned experiments and surprise improvisations. In addition he includes a long chapter on his unpleasant experiences after a dose of lysergic acid.

Varied, idiosyncratic and comprehensively illustrated with diagrams by Charles Philipson, this book gives an unusual close-up picture of a modern scientist at work. The author belongs to the Physiology Department of the University of Birmingham.