One day in 1945 a man named Kuda Bux climbed onto his
bicycle and pedaled into New York City Traffic. He rode blithely through busy
Times Square and came to rest without mishap. To those watching him, it was an
astonishing feat. Blindfolded throughout the trip, Bux had still been able to
see where she was going.
This was perhaps the most dramatic demonstration of a talent
that made Bux famous in the 1930’s and 40’s. But he was by no means the only
person who was able to see without using his eyes.
The 17th century Irish scientist Robert Boyle
recounted the case of a man could identify colours through touch. The first
Europeans to reach Samoa in the 18th century reported that blind
islanders were able to describe their appearance.
In 1893, doctors in Brooklyn, New York, described how blind
Mollie Fancher read standard printed books with her fingertips. And in Italy at
about the same time, a neurologist, Dr. Cesare Lombroso, treated a
fourteen-year-old blind girl who could “see” with her left earlobe and the tip
of her nose. When Lombroso attempted to prod her nose with a pencil, the girl
jerked away and cried, “Are you trying to blind me?”
Cases such as these intrigued French scientist Jules
Romains. After years of experimentation, in 1920 Romains published a long
treatise on the phenomenon entitled Eyeless Sight. Romains noted that some
subjects “saw” without any contact with the objects they described; others
“saw” with their fingertips, cheeks, even their stomachs.
Although the book by Romains attracted little response from
the medical profession, further instances of what he called “paroptic vision”
occasionally made headlines. In 1960 fourteen-year-old Margaret Foos of
Ellerson, Virginia, underwent elaborate tests conducted by experts. Securely
blindfolded, Margaret read randomly selected passages of print, identified
colours and objects, and even played a game of checkers.
Scientific attention focused on the phenomenon only after
1963, when Russian medical researchers reported on the case of Rosa Kuleshova. In
several rigidly controlled experiments, during which she was blindfolded, Rosa
had read newsprint and sheet music with her fingertips and her elbow.
The Kuleshova experiments awakened the interest of Dr.
Richard P. Youtz, a psychologist at Columbia University in New York City, and
he decided to pursue the subject. After several tests of his own, Youtz
concluded that Kuleshova and others like her were abnormally sensitive to the
amount of heat absorbed by different colours.
According to Dr. Youtz, sightless reading is possible
because black print absorbs more heat and is warmer than the surrounding white
page, which reflects heat very efficiently.
While this may account for people “seeing” with their
fingertips or elbows, it does not explain how people such as Kuda Box or
Margaret Foos could see objects without coming in contact with them. This type
of eyeless sight remains a fully documented but so far an inexplicable mystery.
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