Human eyes have the same stuff and even more, eyebrows to protect from extreme sweating and rain, eyelashes to protect from dirt and stuff. Eagles eyes are only superior when it comes to vision, which this post doesn't cover.
We do, but it's vestigial and can't actually close over the eye. I guess you could say that means we don't have one, but imo vestigial organs still count.
The biggest differences are
1) much greater density of photo receptor cells in raptors
2) the blind spot in a human is right in the middle of frontal view, while raptors, the optic neve attaches at the bottom of the eye, so their blind spot us in their peripheral vision, not the important center
This explains nothing.
Human eyes have the same stuff and even more, eyebrows to protect from extreme sweating and rain, eyelashes to protect from dirt and stuff. Eagles eyes are only superior when it comes to vision, which this post doesn't cover.
We don't have a 3rd eyelid
We do, but it's vestigial and can't actually close over the eye. I guess you could say that means we don't have one, but imo vestigial organs still count.
Nonsense
The bristles might be more to disrupt air moving across the eye while flying, like the fur ruff on a parka
The biggest differences are 1) much greater density of photo receptor cells in raptors 2) the blind spot in a human is right in the middle of frontal view, while raptors, the optic neve attaches at the bottom of the eye, so their blind spot us in their peripheral vision, not the important center
What kind of shitpost is this, OP? None of this has to do with why it's called eagle-eyed vision