Ah! - So you are not only quoting only a PORTION of the Textbook - but you do not have ALL the text book to research so you can cite relevant quotes which would be applicable to this conversation.
That’s not really a good position if you want to mount a logical argument which is based upon citing quotes from a textbook.
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OK, that stated, now let’s address your question -
I think that there might be a language issue – an issue of the nuance of meaning: it is not about the size of the object - it is about the apparent (apparent means “how it appears”) relationship of the sizes and positions of the objects in the scene.
In Paul’s Photos the apparent relationships of the sizes of the objects have NOT changed.
For example – in BOTH IMAGES:
> the little rock at the right hand side of the group of three rocks is about half the height of the big two rocks
> the little white outcrop of rock in front of the big brown rocks is about ¼ as wide as the big brown rock on the left
> the white water is about the same width as the big brown rock
All these are examples of “the apparent relationship between the position and size of objects
when seen from a specific viewpoint”
If we were to move the camera (i.e. “change the viewpoint"), then those relationships of size and position would change – but cropping does NOT change those relationships of size and position.
See here -
And now look at Paul's two photos - the RELATIONSHIP of the size and position of these objects in the scene are the same - within each photo.
WW