Originally Posted by
Manfred M
No; not quite the way that this works. It is a lens with electrical connections so that the camera body and mechanisms on board the lens can communicate with each other. The contacts also provide power to the lens components are are actively powered. The actual algorithms that control the lens actions are run on the camera's CPU. This includes aperture actions, autofocus and image stabilization. There will be control circuitry in the lens to manage the autofocus motor and the in-less stabilization mechanism.
The G and E series are much the same way, but the technology is evolving. The main two differences between the D and G series is that the D series has no built in autofocus motor and relies on the camera's built in motor, rather than one in the lens used in the G series and newer. The other main change is that the G series of lenses lost the traditional aperture ring, so these lenses are not backwards compatible with the older camera bodies. To use the command wheel on the camera body, the D series lenses have to have the aperture set and locked to the maximum f-stop value, so the aperture ring is largely redundant moving forward.