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The Sense of Vision and the Missing Watch
The problem is never how to get new, innovative thoughts into your mind, but how to get the old ones out.
-Dee Hock
The human visual system is a pattern seeker of enormous power and subtlety. The eye and the visual cortex of the brain form a massively parallel processor that provides the highest bandwidth channel into your cognitive centers. You rely more on the sense of vision than on any other of the senses.
When compared to our other senses, hearing, smell, taste, and touch, which are like narrow alleyways paved in cobblestone; vision is like a superhighway.
No doubt about those facts. None. But you still need to rely on your brain to decide on how to use all of your senses. Here a simple story about a missing watch we found to illustrate our point (author unknown):
There once was a farmer who discovered that he had lost his watch in the barn. It was no ordinary watch because it was a family heirloom and had great sentimental value for him.
After searching high and low among the hay for a long while; he gave up and enlisted the help of a group of children that liked to play outside the barn.
He promised them that the person who found it would be rewarded.