| Thank you. I think I see where you're coming from. That article has some interesting phrasing which I think is causing confusion. (For me at least.) It looks like they're using 'normal' to mean 'average in the range' some of the time and 'mean population visual acuity' other times. Mostly they're using the former. So 'normal vision' or 'average eyesight' refers to the range of 20/20 eyesight and not 'mean eyesight'. That doesn't explain that second sentence, though, which seems to go back to 'mean human visual acuity'. At the very least, they could stand to revise the writing in that sentence. If they did mean to imply that the average person has 20/20 vision, I think they're going to have to provide a source. I did slightly more digging and I couldn't find any journal publications that list less than 60% of adults as having corrected vision. Either the remaining 40 have strongly superhuman vision or the number is off. I think there is at least one blind person (legally worse than 20/200) for every person with super human (20/10, the physical limit for humans) vision. A simple numerical test based on that last point seems to illustrate the unlikeliness of a 20/20 average. To state again, 20/10 is the physical limit for human vision. Any higher and it's not physically possible to pack more photoreceptors into the retina or focus the pupil tighter. Bad (legally blind) vision is in the realm of 20/200. The National Federation for the Blind[1] shows there are roughly 6,700,000 blind Americans of all age groups. We will assume that they're exactly at the legal bound for blindness and not worse. To find how many superhumans we need to make the average 20/20, I think we can use (6700000200 + x10)/2 < 20 We need x to be less then -133999996. So it's simply impossible for the average vision to be 20/20. It's still possible that number is correct and that the average American has 20/20, but at this point the majority of the scientific publications and formal surveys do not support the idea. If you can find additional sources (I'm so sorry to keep asking), please let me know. [1]https://nfb.org/blindness-statistics |