Visual arrived in English at a time when scholars still debated whether the eye sent out rays to illuminate objects or received light reflected from them. The word came from Late Latin visualis, itself built on visus, the past participle of vidēre ('to see'). In fifteenth-century English, 'visual' appeared in philosophical and optical treatises — discussions of 'visual spirits' and 'visual faculties' that drew on Aristotle and the Arabic optical tradition. As the emission theory of vision faded, the word settled into its modern role: an adjective for anything relating to sight. The twentieth century gave it a second life as a noun. Film editors spoke of 'the visuals', meaning the images as distinct from sound, and the usage spread into advertising, design, and everyday speech. Today visual sits comfortably in both technical and casual registers, a rare word that belongs equally to neuroscience ('the visual cortex') and social media ('stunning visuals').