Library/PT 140/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

People often ask why mirrors seem to flip left and right but not top and bottom. The main answer is that what looks reversed depends on how we turn to face the mirror; because we usually rotate around a vertical axis, the image appears left-right flipped. A rival idea says mirrors reverse front and back by imagining a real chair inside the mirror, but that wrongly treats a nonexistent three-dimensional object as real. This idea feels natural because mirrors make a flat surface seem deep and we rely on mental pictures, and because scientists like explanations that ignore the observer. But to explain how images appear, we have to include the observer’s position and viewpoint.

Logic Breakdown

The passage contrasts two accounts of mirror images: the 'field-of-sight' explanation (apparent reversal depends on how the observer rotates their view) and the 'front-to-back' explanation (treats an imagined in-mirror object as real). The author criticizes the front-to-back view for relying on a false premise and for reflecting a scientific tendency to exclude the observer. The author argues that questions about images must include both the properties of mirrors and the observer’s role; images entail an observer and point of view.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

With which one of the following statements would the author of the passage be most likely to agree?

Correct Answer
C
The author explicitly ties the criticized front-to-back account to a traditional tendency to separate phenomenon and observer: In addition to its intuitive appeal, the front-to-back explanation is motivated in part by the traditional desire in science to separate the observer from the phenomenon. Scientists like to think that what mirrors do should be explainable without reference to what the observer does (e.g., rotating a field of sight). The author further insists on including the observer: If we remove the observer from consideration, we are no longer addressing images and appearances, because an image entails an observer and a point of view. This directly supports choice C.
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