The majority of legally blind people's eyes can detect light from dark but not enough to be able to 'see' in a practical sense, so the answer for those is yes. For the remainder, accidents that have so badly injured the eyes and/or optic nerves, or diseases that have necessitated their removal, the answer is no.
Congress. ~ A person who is blind, most bats, animals that are blind, and many different things. I have a friend who is blind, well in 1 and 3 quarters of her eyes but she has eyes, but can not see too well.
close.. logically
Eyelids have no function besides to protect the eyes from harm, and to moisten the eyes every few seconds (this is why blinking occurs). Therefore, a blind person can have open eyelids, but still be able to see nothing.
Blind sharks got their common name because they close their eyes when they are taken out of the water.
It does not blind a person, but their eyes would burn so much that they would need to tightly close them, therefore impairing their vision.
The Sun can burn your eyes and make you blind.
colour blind
The eye can stop seeing if you go blind. Fish can't close their eyes because they don't have eye lids (exception to some sharks) to close them with.
put a string in front of their eyes by luke greenwood
Piercing your eyes will cause you to go blind. Do not do it at any age.
The eyes of a blind person can appear as normal as anyone else's. Even folks with glass eyes can seem "normal" Some technically blind folk have limited vision so they look towards the objects they are interested in. Some totally blind people who were originally sighted carry on this behavior based on where they know the object of interest is. The Hollywood portrayal of the blind always looking at the wrong thing or off into the distance, or having milky covers on their eyes is not a correct portrayal.
Generally, a blind person blinks for the same reason a sighted person blinks. We blink to maintain the moisture in our eyes. They're at the same rate.