To understand how the human eye works, first imagine a photographic camera—since cameras were developed very much with the human eye in mind.

The adjusted light passes through the lens of the eye. Located behind the pupil, the lens automatically adjusts the path of the light and brings it into sharp focus onto the receiving area at back of the eye—the retina.
An amazing membrane full of photoreceptors (a.k.a. the “rods and cones”), the retina converts the light rays into electrical impulses. These then travel through the optic nerve at the back of the eye to the brain, where an image is finally perceived.
In effect, a lens is put in front of the eye to make up for any deficiencies in the complex vision process.
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