Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]To: >INTERNET:Leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Alf Breull wrote: >> The kids crawled from one side of the room to the other, even >> across the glass stone area without hesitation... I've always liked that experiment, for what it says about the complexity of the development of human intelligence. It's not just the usual story, that at a certain age you suddenly "get" something you didn't before (that the child in the mirror is you, that two different containers have the same volume, etc). Here there's nothing wrong with those babies to begin with, they act on the relevant information: the glass is a hard surface, and they correctly go across it. Later on they realize what looking through the glass means, they worry about heights and falling, and mistakenly start avoiding the glass. (Of course, glass floors were uncommon in our evolutionary past...) Eventually, with better experience and judgement, they will have to convince themeslves that the transparency of the glass is really irrelevant, and it's perfectly okay to go across again. How fortunate we are to have a brain (sometimes) capable of correcting the problems it creates for us. That said, I myself don't feel obstacles of such psychological depth in vertical focusing. The only problem I have is purely ergonomic: holding the camera and using the focusing tab just isn't as convenient in this position. (Also, I suppose with the wrong hold it's possible to obscure the rangefinder window; what other explanation is there for not seeing the focusing rectangle at all, as John Doherty complained?) -- Eric Meyer.