>>Ahhh, who knows? How does the Invisible Woman see?
>
> Actually, that is an easy one. If my memory serves me, she actually
>bends the light around her, making her appear "invisible." Therefore,
>she subconsciously allows light being bent to reflect other objects' light,
>which gives any human the ability to perceive it. Remember, even though she
>doesn't do it much anymore, she has made certain articles of clothing disappear,such as a mask on someone..how I don't know, I'll leave THAT up to the
>real scientists
>
Yeah, but if she's bending ALL light away from herself (to render her invisible)
none can penetrate to strike the cornea, allowing her to see. She can't
have it both ways. For her to "see," the light HAS to strike the
back of her eyes.
--
I don't mind being the smartest / Thanatos, DeathUrge, Master of Unknown
man in the world...I just wish it \ Time and Space tgt33358@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu