Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT140 S4 P4 Q23 Explanation

Explaining Mirror Images

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsAuthor OpinionScience

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Passage

Physicists are often asked why the image of an object, such as a chair, appears reversed left-to-right rather than, say, top-to-bottom when viewed in a mirror. Their answer is simply that an image viewed in a mirror appears reversed about the axis around which the viewer rotates his or her field of sight about a vertical axis, mirror images usually appear reversed left-to-right. This is the field-of-sight explanation.

However, some physicists offer a completely different explanation of what mirrors “do,” suggesting that mirrors actually reverse things front-to-back. If we place a chair in front of a mirror we can envision how its reflected image will appear by imagining another chair in the space “inside” the mirror. The resulting reflection is explanation treats it as though it were as real and three dimensional as the original chair.

This explanation appeals strongly to many people, however, because it is quite successful at explaining what a mirror does—to a point. It seems natural because we are accustomed to dealing with our mental constructs of objects rather than with the primary sense perceptions on which those constructs are based. In general, we our eyes; rather, we look into them, with our focal lengths adjusted into the imagined space.

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). However, questions longer addressing images and appearances, because an image entails an observer and a point of view.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
23.

It can be inferred that the author of the passage believes that the front-to-back explanation of what

Answer choices

  1. Opposite9% picked this

    successful because it is based on incongruous facts that can

    The author's main point is that the front to back is not an adequate explanation, so calling the theory successful seems to go agains the author's main thrust. She certainly doesn't mention that it reconciles incongruous facts.

  2. Opposite7% picked this

    successful because it rejects any consideration of

    The author's main point is that the front to back is not an adequate explanation because it fails to consider the observer (the person with the mental constructs), so this seems like the opposite. The author would be more likely to call it unsuccessful because it's rejecting any consideration of the observer.

  3. Wrong Point of View5% picked this

    successful because it involves the rotation of a field of sight

    Rotating a field of sight was not part of "front-to-back". It was part of the aptly named "field of sight" explanation. So this answer is saying "The 2nd theory is successful because it says what the 1st theory said".

  4. Wrong Reason15% picked this

    successful only to a point because it is consistent with the traditional explanations that

    "Successful only to a point" is supported by the first sentence of the 3rd paragraph: it is quite successful at explaining what a mirror does -- to a point. But the reason the author won't give this explanation full credit is because of what is said in the final two sentences of the passage. When we say, "It was successful only to a point because ....", the thing we would naturally insert in that spot of the sentence is the factor that prevented it from being a total success. The author never said that front-to-back was prevented from being fully successful because it's consistent with traditional explanations.

  5. Correct65% picked this

    successful only to a point because it does not include what happens when we look

    Why this is right

    "Successful only to a point" is supported by the first sentence of the 3rd paragraph: it is quite successful at explaining what a mirror does -- to a point. The reason the author won't give this explanation full credit is because of what is said in the final two sentences of the passage: if we don't consider both what mirrors do and what happens when we look into mirrors, then questions about the appearances of images cannot be properly answered.

    Skill tested: Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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