“It might seem hardly worth questioning the idea that the
world is made for seeing, or that eyes are consequent upon the undeniable fact
that there is so much to be seen. Yet
think for a moment and the inevitability of vision is much more uncertain. The
world is full of other signals that may be used to describe it: there are
smells, chemical signals both subtle and ubiquitous, and touch is as sensitive
to shape as sight – more so, because it cannot be misled by trompe l‘oeil or by camouflage.
Imagine a world in which the eye had never developed – not the
eye of insect, nor of fish, nor of mammal, nor yet Mankind. It is easy to conceive
of the other senses having taken over the comprehension of their surroundings.
It would be a world of palpation, of feelers, a world in which caresses would
have rendered glances superfluous. The twitching and waving of antennae would
accompany every action. It is not difficult to imagine that a different
evolutionary course would have selected those organs most delicately attuned to
the passing molecule: even now we know of moths so sensitive to the pheromones
of the opposite sex that the most evanescent whiff of a mate can stimulate a
love flight across kilometres. In a sightless world, sensitivity to such
stimuli would be selected and refined: it would be a world of nuance so
delicate that our gross mauling’s would be inconceivable.
In conscious animals this most sensory of environments would
entail everywhere the language of touch and smell: beauty would be aural or
tactile or olfactory. Poetry would not celebrate the unfathomable mysteries of
eyes and their unplumbable depths, nor compare hair with flax, for visual
similes would be redundant. Rather, the texture of skin might be the supreme
erotic stimulus, or natural selection might have favoured en even more
elaborate array of perfumes and chemical attractants, which in turn would
evolve a language of which we can only dream. There might be symphonies of
perfume, Mozarts of musk. Novelists might construct nasal narratives,
versifiers sonnets of scent. Sculpture would entail subtleties of shape that
only fingers trained through hundreds of millions of years of tactile evolution
could discriminate. There would be no word for ‘blindness’.”
Richard Fortey in Trilobite!
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