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What the eye sees, if it is at all different from what the brain visually perceives, then this distinction is, for practice purposes, meaningless.
(A) What the eye sees, if it is at all different from what the brain visually perceives, then this distinction is, for practice purposes, meaningless.
(B) It is meaningless, for practical purposes, to take what the eye sees and make it different from what the brain visually perceives.
(C) For practical purposes, it is a meaningless distinction to make what the eyes sees different than what the brain visually perceives.
(D) The distinction of what the eye sees from what the brain visually perceives is, for all practical purposes, meaningless.
(E) What the eye sees, being different from what the brain visually perceives is, for practice purposes, meaningless.
OA D
Source: Magoosh
(A) What the eye sees, if it is at all different from what the brain visually perceives, then this distinction is, for practice purposes, meaningless.
(B) It is meaningless, for practical purposes, to take what the eye sees and make it different from what the brain visually perceives.
(C) For practical purposes, it is a meaningless distinction to make what the eyes sees different than what the brain visually perceives.
(D) The distinction of what the eye sees from what the brain visually perceives is, for all practical purposes, meaningless.
(E) What the eye sees, being different from what the brain visually perceives is, for practice purposes, meaningless.
OA D
Source: Magoosh

















