@CanuckistanPete nice set of picturesque butt related pics! Goth butts are usually hot, hotter if they’ve been working the fields
i thought the colors depended on the rods and cones in your eyes, not the way the brain perceives the signals. i thought that was how we knew dogs were color blind, no rods or cones to perceive colors.
those weren’t friends, those were followers, and i have almost 100. of course i’m a little over 30, by about a quarter of a century…
The rods and cones in our eyes “see” black/white and colors respectively. That “seeing” is the interpretation of specific wavelengths into colors, and black and white. The rods and cones are arranged so that the rods are more on the outer portion of the eye, the cones on the inner. The rods are also what we use for our peripheral vision.
I know this weird shit because about 40 years ago my best friend developed retinitis pigmentosa, a recessive inherited gene related degenerative eye condition. I watched as his vision progressively got worse and worse through time. The weird part was I was reading a book literally right at that time about a guy who had rp. As I’m reading this true story, I’m thinking, holy shit this sounds like Jim! He and his wife, of course, were also aware of his vision issue, but hadn’t really given it serious consideration. Shortly after I told them what I suspected, he was properly diagnosed by a medical professional and we found out I was, unfortunately, correct. I hated that day. Fucked his life all up.
I have no idea about dog’s eyes.
Floods, literally…
When we are born we mostly have rods and the cones develop later on, we learn to focus and develop more cones by waving our hands around as babies and watching them.
A lot of Aisian people ware glasses because they are swaddled at birth and can not wave their arms and hands about in front of their face.
Most excellent! What you say makes sense. I suspect that in utero it’s dark, so our need to see is limited basically to black. No need for lots of cones yet. Once out in the world, colors come into play in a way they didn’t previously, so the part about waving our arms around to “teach” our eyes what to do, as well as the development of more cones, totally makes sense to what’s left of my mind.
Thank you, @Shadey, for that really informative comment!
OMG! I love him!! That’s so funny!!
I dont get it? He got water into his suit??
And FRIED goddamit–as they were MEANT to be!!!
Thank Star Trek!