Once, a professor kept a chair at a certain distance on the stage, in front of the audience. He started his lecture, then pointing to the middle row, those who were sitting exactly in front of the chair, he asked, “How many legs the chair has that you can see, but answer me what you observe, not considering that the chair has four legs.”
The first person of the middle row replied, “Two”, because the other two legs were hidden behind the front legs. The professor then asked the same question to the left side. The answer came “Three. Here, one back leg was hidden behind one of it’s front side leg. So, only three werevisible.
The same question was repeated to the right side and the extreme corner side audience. The answers, he received were “Three” and “Four”. The professor then said, “Look!! All of you know that the chair has four legs, but when I asked you to answer me exactly what you are observing from your angle, your answer was different. But, do you think it is possible? So what does it mean? Do you think that the same chair has two, three or four legs? It is clearly, the answer is “no”. We assume it as the changing numbers according to our perception(感知), the angle from which we view. So, what I mean to say is that our perception is not always absolutely correct or true. The same thing happens to everybody, when he/she judges others from his/her view points. It is necessary to take your time, but judge others correctly.”
Good things are always taught, but it depends upon you and how much you want to learn it! Sometimes, things are misunderstood because of our angle of perception.
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1. What did the professor require the audience do answering his question?
A They should all sit directly in the middle row.
B They should know the number of chair’s legs.
C They should keep a short distance on the stage.
D They should report exactly what they have seen.
2. Who can see two legs?
A The audience in the middle part of the row.
B The audience in extreme corner side.
C The audience in the left part of the row.
D The audience in the right part of the row.
3. The underlined word “visible” in the second paragraph means _____.
A caught
B seen
C shared
D managed
4. What made people get different answers?
A Their angle of perception.
B Their different opinion.
C Their hidden position.
D Their hidden position.
5. Why did the professor carry out the research?
A He wanted to show how silly the audience were.
B He reminded people how to get the right opinion.
C He would show why people were misunderstood.
D He used his own example to explain how to teach.
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