why does the mirror show lateral inversion
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The mirror shows a three-dimensional object reversed in the direction at 90 degrees (normal) to the mirror surface. In slightly simplified terms, the “front-back” is reversed. However, people usually perceive that change as a left-right reversal (hence the term lateral inversion) rather than a front-back reversal.
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If a person looks into a mirror and raises his right hand, the image in the mirror makes it look like the person raised his left hand due to lateral inversion. Although it appears that mirrors reverse images, they actually switch them from back to front in the same way that a printing press does
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