The "retina".
An eye is an organ that senses images and light.
The retina.
In the human eye, images are formed on the retina, which is a light-sensitive layer located at the back of the eye. The lens of the eye helps focus light onto the retina, where it is converted into electrical signals that are sent to the brain for processing.
The 'eye' is a possibility
the iris finds and detects images and sends them to the brain
Cornea
The iris is the colour part of the eye.
a part of the eye lens
will the human eye does not really see anything it just captures the light and the brain interprets it into recognizable images and corrects the position of the light ...
The retina is the reflective tissue at the back of the eye on which images are projected.
The retina is the part of the eye that captures images of light. It contains cells called photoreceptors (rods and cones) that convert light into electrical signals that are sent to the brain for processing.
Images being projected onto the human eye are first flipped upon refraction of the lens and then projected onto the retina. The images is then sent via through the optic nerve (Cranial Nerve II) to the optic chiasma. This is where the images are then "crossed" so that the brain processes the appropriate information for each eye's visual field (so the eye corresponds images in left eye with the left side of the body).