Oh! Man, it's been so long since I watched it I didn't even think of that. In fact, I thought msbelle was declaring she'd found something. I guess I needed the "From". Thanks!
Natter 57 Varieties
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
From the Abba article:
Ola Brunkert dies after accidently shattering window glass with his head
Isn't that a really odd way to put it?
glances over at ita Did you know that there’s an entire LJ community dedicated to Jack Carter/Nathan Stark?
I think ita needs to direct Colin right to that community.
I think that horse has already left the barn: CFerg "Boxed Set, Vol. IV: It's always suicide-mission this, save-the-planet that." Aug 17, 2007 12:46:08 pm PDT
Ola Brunkert dies after accidently shattering window glass with his head
So the Abba drummer joined Spinal Tap?
That is to say, someone who was rendered virtually blind as a result of brain damage—someone whose cortex couldn't make sense of a visual scene, for example—would not be considered "legally blind," so long as his eyeballs themselves were functioning normally.
Actually, that makes sense to me. It's not that the eyes aren't seeing it, it's that the brain is turning the seen objects into a bunch of dancing hamsters. (Or similar.) That's much more easily classed under brain damage than blindness; and anyway, somebody who's legally blind sees everything with equal poverty, while somebody with visual brain damage might be able to register some things but not others (e.g. blindsight).
The whole "you got your injury in a shitty way, therefore it doesn't count as an injury," that I have more of a problem with.
The coffee machine on my floor is broken.
It really is Monday, isn't it?
somebody who's legally blind sees everything with equal poverty,
Not true. My grandmother is legally blind from macular degeneration and so can see much more clearly with her peripheral vision than straight ahead. Unless that's not what you were trying to say.
It really is Monday, isn't it?
Yes. Yes it is. Tragic, that.
Not true. My grandmother is legally blind from macular degeneration and so can see much more clearly with her peripheral vision than straight ahead. Unless that's not what you were trying to say.
My grandfather had that too! He used to hold Mah Jongg tiles up next to his head rather than in front of him, to try and see what they were using his peripheral vision.
But no, that's not what I'm trying to say. With macular degeneration, everything you see is perceived with equal quality: oncoming truck or Mah Jongg tile, as long as you see it with the peripheral parts of the visual field, you see it. With brain damage, depending on the type, you might see the moving truck but not the stationary tile, or be able to read the number off the tile but fail to realize that an oncoming truck is a threat, or correctly recognize the threat of the truck without knowing why or being able to say what that oncoming threat is called. People with blindsight can't tell you what object you're holding in your hands, but if you throw it at them, they'll duck.