16. Does your sense of hearing, smell, and touch become better after you go blind? In the past, some philosophers (哲学家) said that blind people had "supernormal" powers of hearing and touch. Today, it's common in films to have a blind character with some kind of super-sense ability: one of the most famous is the blind superhero Daredevil, who hears birds flying miles away from him, and follows bad people with his super smell.
So maybe it's no wonder that this is a common question, according to L. Penny Rosenblum, the Director of Research for the American Foundation for the Blind. But, she says, the answer is no: "People who are blind do not have better hearing. Since they cannot depend on their eyes as the sighted people, they use hearing to compensate for the loss of sight."
In other words, a blind person's senses aren't better than a sighted person's. But a person feeling the world mostly through hearing and touch is better at simply noticing and identifying (辨别) different sounds and sensations (感觉). Having a walk in a busy street, a sighted person notices the bright, flashing signs on nearby shops, the colors of people's clothing and the size and shape of the buildings ahead of them — all of these tell them where they are, how fast they're going, and what's coming ahead. "On a walk down a city sidewalk, a blind person would probably notice the sounds of traffic (cars, trucks, motorcycles), the footsteps and conversations of the people, and the sounds from the buildings, says Deborah Atein, of the National Federation of the Blind of Illinois. Those sounds and textures achieve the same thing for someone who's blind as colors and lights do for a sighted person.
Think of it this way: if you're sighted and have ever felt your way to the bathroom in the middle of the night, you might have noticed that all the sounds and sensations of the house seem much more noticeable in the dark, without your eyes distracting (分散注意力) you — the ticking clock in your room, the noise of the fridge through the hall. The cold tile (地砖) under your feet tells you that you're in the bathroom. Finally, you go back to your bed successfully. You've guided all the way back without much help from your eyes — and without super-senses!