1). This perfect spiral staircase
2). Now, look at this flawless flower:
3). And the texture of this pure painting.
4). Now, take a look at this unique pencil twist:
5). And this very soft serve:
1). This perfect spiral staircase
2). Now, look at this flawless flower:
3). And the texture of this pure painting.
4). Now, take a look at this unique pencil twist:
5). And this very soft serve:
Lord Shiva’s third eye is called Jyotipunj. It is located on the forehead between his two eyebrows. Lord Shiva is also known as Trinetradhari and Trilochan.
Beliefs related to Lord Shiva’s third eye:
A bionic eye would have to receive photons and translate them into an electrical impulse. No big deal there.
But it has to more or less duplicate the signal that was being sent to the brain by the living eye. And it has to do it in a very, very small space in real time.
A prototype for a new bionic eye.
So first you have to figure out what a human eye does when it signals the brain and do the same thing. (This doesn’t have to be exact. The mind can adjust almost magically to deal with different input.)
You have to re-connect all the eye muscles so that the person has the capability to move the eye. (human eyes move constantly and we cannot see if our eyes cannot move.)
Because it’s moving all the time, it cannot irritate the eye cavity in any way and it has to not be rejected by the body’s immune system.
It’s all doable, but it’s technically very difficult.