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New Methods In The Science Of Fitting Glasses (1896) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R592
Discovery Miles 5 920
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New Methods In The Science Of Fitting Glasses (1896) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R592
Discovery Miles 5 920
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
Chapter II. HYPEROPIA. No. 1, Showing the hyperoplc eye in which
parallel rays of light do not form a focus until they have passed
the retina. No. 2, with the convex lens before the eye the light
forms a focus on the retina. THE defects of the eye are first
divided into two classes, according to the length of the eye-ball
from the cornea to the retina. First?Hyperopia, or far sight, due
to a short eye-ball. Second?Myopia, or near sight, due to a long
eye-ball. Hyperopia is again divided into latent (concealed) and
manifest. In latent hyperopia, the defect being concealed, the
vision is apparently normal, the patient being able to read the
finest print and to see distant objects clearly also. In manifest
hyperopia there is dimness of vision for reading, and if there is
considerable hyperopia there is dimness in distant vision also.
This dimness of sight in manifest hyperopia ia very annoying, but
it is not such a strain on the nervous system as latent hyperopia;
but in most cases whenever there is manifest hyperopia there is
some latent also, as the nerves and muscles of the eye are ever
striving to give the best vision possible. To do this they must
overcome as much of the hyperopia as possible, and as part of it is
overcome, then part of it is latent. Now let us look at the
condition of the nerves and muscles of the hyperopic eye. We know
that in the normal eye the nerves and muscles are at rest when
looking at distant objects, but in the hyperopic eye we will learn
that the nerves and muscles are under constant strain, both for
distant and close vision. We will illustrate by showing how the
light will focus at certain distances from a bi-convex lens. Take a
+ 6 D. lens and hold it in front of a piece of white paper or card
board and let the light from...
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