(no title)
mopierotti | 1 year ago
Edit: I hate to dwell on this too much, but even if a door and mirrors were visible, the bus could be in reverse. This seems to be more of a case of accidentally picking the intended answer due to a lack of knowledge. (Of levels of abstraction in representation and of vehicle design.) That said, I don't necessarily disagree with the underlying point being made.
anonymous_sorry|1 year ago
YurgenJurgensen|1 year ago
EDIT: And if the question weren't ambiguous, you'd basically be telling people the answer, since as soon as you say "assume it's in the US", you give a massive clue that bilateral asymmetry is relevant.
soared|1 year ago
dkdbejwi383|1 year ago
bowsamic|1 year ago
iforgotpassword|1 year ago
Sure, the bus could be in reverse, but it could also be a British bus driving in the US. Or we could be looking at a reflection of the bus. Or we could be looking at the reflection of a British bus going in reverse. This is not about determining the direction with 100% certainty. This is about having a clue at all which you can justify, which adults mostly don't.
cnasc|1 year ago
phist_mcgee|1 year ago
portaouflop|1 year ago
But they always have doors…
janniehater|1 year ago
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