Graphic Representation — Historical Lines of Development Has graphic representation historically evolved along two distinct lines called "engineering and technical," or are the two lines more accurately described as "artistic" and "technical/engineering"?
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ACorrect
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BIncorrect
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CPartially correct
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DUnclear terminology
Answer
Correct Answer: Incorrect
Explanation
Introduction / Context:The item tests historical terminology. Traditionally, two major lines are recognized: artistic representation (fine art, illustration) and technical or engineering representation (meant for precise specification). Calling the two lines "engineering and technical" is redundant and misstates the common dichotomy.
Given Data / Assumptions:
- Artistic representation seeks expression and aesthetics.
- Technical representation seeks precision and instruction.
- Engineering falls under the technical line.
Concept / Approach:We check whether the labels reflect distinct purposes. “Engineering and technical” are overlapping; the classic split is “artistic vs technical.”
Step-by-Step Solution:1) Define artistic line: expressive, illustrative, subjective.2) Define technical line: objective, standardized, specification-focused.3) Recognize engineering as a subset of technical.4) Conclude the stated pair is inaccurate.
Verification / Alternative check:Survey design education texts: courses separate freehand/illustrative techniques from orthographic and dimensioned drawings.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:“Correct” repeats the redundancy. “Partially correct” and “Unclear terminology” do not fix the mislabeled dichotomy.
Common Pitfalls:Conflating discipline (engineering) with method (technical drawing); ignoring the artistic tradition.
Final Answer:Incorrect