Blindness Essay

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    on colour blindness In spite of the name, colour blindness isn’t a form of blindness but a defect in the way that your eyes interpret colour. With this particular problem, you’ll find yourself having trouble when it comes to telling the difference between certain colours such as blue and yellow or more commonly red and green. Colour blindness, or colour vision deficiency as it’s sometimes known, is inherited and tends to affect more males than females. According to the Prevent Blindness America association

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    Native American Blindness

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    the ideal type to call someone not blind, they did let the patient see clear enough to allow them to recognize faces who they would otherwise not be able to see. This breakthrough in the bionic eyes is going to benefit lots of patients with common blindness, macular degeneration, all which affect around 500,000 people in the USA. “The Argus II—a kind of retinal

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    obstructed. This definition can be perceived in two different ways. It can mean literal blindness, where someone or something has a loss of vision and is unable to see. Though it can also mean someone is unwilling to recognize what is happening around them because it is easier for them to simply ignore it. Throughout the play, the topic of eyesight is brought up many times as a way of foreshadowing blindness throughout King Lear. Gloucester is th only character who is both metaphorically and literally

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    When defining the word blindness, it can be interpreted in various ways. Either it can be explained as sightless, or it can be carefully deciphered as having a more complex in-depth analysis. In the novel Blindness, Jose Saramago depicts and demonstrates how in an instant your right to see can be taken in an instant. However, in this novel, blindness is metaphorically related to ‘seeing’ the truth beyond our own bias opinions. Saramago’s novel clearly illustrates themes that describe the importance

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    explanation from the dictionary, blindness means unable to see, lacking the sense of sight. Here it can be understood as the physical disability. In William Shakespeare’s King Lear, it can be understood as two different elaborations on this word “blindness”. One hand is the physically disabled, just as Gloucester’s story in the play, he was defected and lose his eyesight, on the other hand, the “blindness” can be understood as mind blindness. It is obvious that in the play Blindness leads to tragedy. Sight

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    Approximately 39 million people today are estimated to be blind. By “blind”, scientists usually imply physical blindness, or the loss of vision. However, in Shakespeare’s King Lear, blindness can have a much different meaning. Blindness in King Lear refers to the inability to see what is right and to differ from good and evil. Blindness can be the inability to see the scheming actions of others around him. Although no characters were physically blind in King Lear, except Gloucester, there were many

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    Sight and blindness, though opposites in every sense, are paradoxically interconnected in literature and film. The old archetype of a blind prophet has been strewn throughout both ancient and modern media. Justice and her blindfold, Paul Atreides from the Dune series, and the superhero Daredevil are all part of this paradox, albeit in different variants. One of the most well known examples of this tension between the seeing and unseeing is found in the timeworn story of Oedipus by Sophocles, and

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    Although blindness and sight seem diametrically opposed, they are more similar to each other than it would seem. In Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, the relationship between figurative blindness and literal blindness is portrayed. In the play, figurative blindness is what Oedipus has as he does not understand his parentage and the prophecy of his doom. Literal blindness is what Teiresias has suffered with his whole life. Sophocles proves in the play that figurative blindness is far more harmful than literal

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    Selfish Blindness Blindness can be defined in two ways. Literal blindness is not being able to physically see the world around. Metaphorical blindness can be used to represent people who act and react as if they were blind, as if decisions made do not affect anyone around. In King Lear, blindness is shown both ways. The characters of Lear and Gloucester struggle because both have been blinded by selfishness. Lear and Gloucester’s blindness push them to make bad decisions and trust the wrong people

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    In King Lear, blindness is more than just the lack of physical sight, but a lack of judgement and understanding of others’ true intentions. Much of the suffering in King Lear stems from impetuous decisions and beliefs. Both King Lear and the Earl of Gloucester were blinded in their own respective ways. Lear’s blindness was more moral, leading to poor decisions that led to suffering, while Gloucester’s blindness was ignorance to his sons’ true intentions, leading to suffering as well. King Lear’s

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