whether you "notice" something or not does NOT alter its reality.
That is like saying that the only relevant reality is the one "out there", the one that exists independently of us.
And yet for a human, the only thing that really is relevant is whatever they are actually able to work with, which depends on the particular abilities of their bodies and brains.
Wynn..yes there does seem to be a difference here in how we are defining the words "see" or "perceive". I take sight to be something that occurs largely in the brain. Have you ever looked at something-"seeing" it with only your eyes--while thinking about something else? Tasked to remember what you were looking at, it's not likely you will recall seeing it. That's because seeing is an act of being AWARE of perceiving something. Without that awareness we might as well be blind.
Agreed.
Which is why our abilities per se are not the sole criterion for what we see, much less for how able we will be to act in a situation.
I remember an incident back when I was learning to drive: there was a number of things I had to pay attention to - the clutch, the brakes, the gas, the mirrors, the car on my right etc. etc. There was a pedestrian walking across the road, right in front of my car, I was aware of him, but I couldn't do anything, my brain was overloaded. I remember that I saw him, but it was as if I didn't know what to do. If asked, I could clearly say what I was supposed to do, namely, stop my car by first pressing the clutch and then the brake, but right there, it was just too much at once for me to act right. Like when a computer hangs. (I didn't hit the pedestrian, by the way.)
Over time, one of course manages to do a great number of things, and do them well, without being aware of them. And then readily forgets that there was a time when one had to follow a very detailed script to do them.
How many things that now we take for granted, at some point we had to learn at an extremely slow pace and in great detail?