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 explanations. The field-of-sight explanation ties reversal to the observer: "an image viewed in a mirror appears reversed about the axis around which the viewer rotates his or her field of sight... That is, the reversal in question is relative to the position and orientation of the observer." By contrast, the alternative front-to-back explanation relies on a false premise: "the chair 'inside' the mirror is not real, yet the explanation treats it as though it were as real and three dimensional as the original chair." Thus the false-premise criticism targets the front-to-back account, not the field-of-sight one.

Passage Stimulus

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26.

The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about the field-of-sight explanation of what mirrors do?

Correct Answer
B
B is correct. The author’s criticism of a false premise applies to the front-to-back explanation, not to the field-of-sight explanation. Support: "The most notable thing about this explanation is that it is clearly based on a false premise: the chair 'inside' the mirror is not real, yet the explanation treats it as though it were as real and three dimensional as the original chair." The field-of-sight account instead focuses on the observer’s orientation: "the reversal in question is relative to the position and orientation of the observer."
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