Although our senses do lack in precision. In Tysons, “Coming to Our Senses”, he states “What we gain in breadth we lose in precision: we register the worlds stimuli in logarithmic rather than linear increments.” (line 27) We can record in multiplication of whats being perceived with our senses. To assist us technology is produced with plenty of senses to exceed ours. Significantly, in the article “Blindness may rapidly enhance other senses” ASA states, “When we speak or play a musical instrument, the sounds have specific harmonic relations. In other words, if we play a certain note on a piano, that note has many related 'layers.' However, we don't hear all of these layers because our brain simply associates them all together … It's through this complex computation based on specific components of the sound that the brain can interpret and distinguish auditory signals coming from different people or instruments.” (paragraph 5) This study shows that our brains see what we learn from our senses as a whole, not as precises and different as we can with enhanced senses using technology. Likewise, our eyes can see the moon and stars in the night sky millions of miles away but, the Hubble Telescope can see other galaxies lightyears away, using its technology and special lenses. Without tools like the Hubble Telescope we wouldn't be able to comprehend the world and universe around …show more content…
In the words of ASA, the article states, “studies have shown, in terms of hearing, that blind people are better at localizing sound ... blindness might improve the ability to localize between sound frequencies.” (paragraph 3) This demonstrates that when a human has a limit on one or more of their senses they begin to adapt to it and become more advanced in using and understanding their others. Such as, some humans are born deaf from birth adapt to their disability and can feel vibrations around them from a door opening in the room next to them, to someone dropping a large book right in front of them. People with impaired hearing also have the benefit of modern day technology. Using hearing aids, the weakened ears can receive sound waves and decode them. Nevertheless without microscopes we wouldn't be able to learn and observe the basics of all that we know cells that make us, and atoms that form what is tangible to us. Tyson proposes that “Suppose a glowing blob of some unknown substance is parked right in front of us. Without some diagnostic tool like a tricorder to help, we would be clueless of the blob's chemical or nuclear composition.”(line 78) To clarify, Tyson says basically if we didn’t have any of our five senses with no technology to aid us we would be lost human beings in our