Perfect Sight Without Glasses
From Wikisource
The Cure of Imperfect Sight by Treatment Without Glasses, also known as Perfect Sight Without Glasses (1920). See also Bates Method.
The Fundamental Principle Preface Chapter 1 - Introductory Chapter 2 - Simultaneous Retinoscopy Chapter 3 - Evidence for the accepted theory of accomodation Chapter 4 - The truth about accommodation as demonstrated by experiments on the eye muscles of fish, cats, dogs, rabbits and other animals Chapter 5 - The truth about accommodation as demonstrated by a study of images reflected from the lens, cornea, iris and sclera Chapter 6 - The truth about accommodation as demonstrated by clinical observations Chapter 7 - The variability of the refraction of the eye Chapter 8 - What glasses do to us Chapter 9 - The cause and cure of errors of refraction Chapter 10 - Strain Chapter 11 - Central fixation Chapter 12 - Palming Chapter 13 - Memory as an aid to vision Chapter 14 - Imagination as an aid to vision Chapter 15 - Shifting and swinging Chapter 16 - The illusions of imperfect and of normal sight Chapter 17 - Vision under adverse conditions a benefit to the eyes Chapter 18 - Optimums and pessimums Chapter 19 - The relief of pain and other symptoms by the aid of the memory Chapter 20 - Presbyopia: Its cause and cure Chapter 21 - Squint and amblyopia: their cause Chapter 22 - Squint and amblyopia: their cure Chapter 23 - Floating specks: their cause and cure Chapter 24 - Home treatment Chapter 25 - Correspondence treatment Chapter 26 - The prevention of myopia in schools: Methods that failed Chapter 27 - The prevention and cure of myopia and other errors of refraction in schools: A method that succeeded Chapter 28 - The story of Emily Chapter 29 - Mind and vision Chapter 30 - Normal sight and the relief of pain for soldiers and sailors Chapter 31 - Letters from patients Chapter 32 - Reason and authority

