This statement suggests to me that your concept of perspective remains different from that of mine, and of most others.
I don't thinks so. I believe I uderstand your concept of perspective. Let me try and describe it.
Your concept is based upon the very well-understood principle, if an object moves in relation to another object, the distance between those two objects has changed. For example, if I move my pencil closer to my notebook I can state categorically that the distance between my pencil and my notebook has been reduced.
If we imagine a robot eye that is so small it is effectively a point, smaller than a pin-head, manufactured say through nanotechnology, and imagine that robot constantly emits millions of rays in all directions as it moves around like a fly, measuring precise distances to all surrounding objects, we can state categorically that no movement equates to no change in distance and no change in perspective, and that any movement in any direction affects the distances between the robot eye and all surrounding objects, and therefore represents a change in perspective.
This is what you mean by perspective, isn't it? A totally theoretical, mathematical and abstract model which has excluded the experience of the human observer when peering through different focal lengths of lenses which results in a different 'view' of the world due to the effects of magnification or size-reduction in relation to the 'normal' perspective that a standard lens provides, or which our own eyes provide.
You will indeed find several references that claim a lens with a focal length approximately equal to the diagonal dimension of the sensor (or film, thus approx. 45mm on 35mm format) produces an image that most closely replicates the visual field of the human eye.
Hey! We almost agree on something
. However, I'm not at all sure that the 'standard lens' actually replicates the visual
field of the human eye. I think it has more to do with degree of magnification. The field of view of the human eye seems to be vastly greater than the FoV of a 50mm lens on a 35mm format camera. As I raise the camera to my eye to view the panoramic scene out my apartment window, using my 14mm Nikkor lens on my D700, I get the impression that my view with naked eye of the same scene with fixed gaze, standing in the same position and looking in the same direction, is actually wider.
Checking on the internet for the Field of View of the naked eye, I see there's some considerable variation in results, but all results are considerably wider than the 39 degrees horizontal FoV of a standard 50mm lens.
Wikipedia quotes the FoV for
simultaneous visual perception, which presumably means without moving head or eyeballs, as 160 degrees x 175 degrees. I believe that's wider than 12mm.
If one wishes to make the point that the angle of
focussed view is much narrower, it is indeed, much narrower than the FoV of a standard lens. I conclude therefore that the FoV of the standard lens does not match the angle of
focussed view of the naked eye, nor does it match the
total FoV of the eye which includes impressions of shapes and sizes, and some sense of color, but greatly lacks detail because focussing is so narrow.
What I conclude from all this is that the
appearance of the size of objects as seen by the human observer greatly influences our sense of our own distance to the object viewed. If we increase that apparent size of any object, through magnification, through viewing the object directly through a telephoto lens, or viewing a print subsequently made, the object appears closer than it actually is. With a 50mm lens, it looks about right, enabling us to fairly accurately estimate the true distance from the photographer to the subject.
However visual field or angle of view is not synonymous with perspective. Angle of view is a quality inherent in a lens; perspective is not.
You're getting a little bit philosophical here, aren't you!
I can't disagree with this statement. Perspective is a quality, a sense, an experience, an impression that can exist only in the mind of a sentient observer. It's not a quality of the lens, which is an inanimate object. A lens doesn't have a perspective, but it can change our
impression or sense of perspective, if it's not a standard lens.
Interestingly, even Nikon seem to agree with me. Here's what they have to say on the subject of perspective at this website:
http://imaging.nikon.com/history/basics/19/03.htmI've highlighted key words to help avoid any confusion in the article.
Perspective
Perspective is a term for a visual effect that causes objects to appear smaller as their distance from the viewer increases. In photography, you can control perspective by changing the lens focal length. Lenses are typically described as being either wide (wide-angle lenses) or long (telephoto lenses). Wide-angle lenses have wide angles of view, increasing the difference in the apparent sizes of objects that are at different distances from the camera. In other words, nearby objects appear larger and distant objects smaller. Telephoto lenses, in contrast, have small angles of view, decreasing the difference in the apparent sizes of objects that are at different distances from the camera. This effect can be used to exaggerate or reduce the effects of perspective by changing the focal length of the lens.
You'll note the emphasis on appearance. No-one is claiming that changing focal length of lens changes the
actual and real distance to any object. That would be absurd.