I am probably completely wrong (I'm sure somebody will correct me very soon) but if he stands farther away, but zooms in on the same subject, isn't the reflective light going to be the same? In other words, isn't an object that fills the frame from 10' away at 25mm the same reflective light from 40' away at 75mm or 100' away at 170mm (numbers don't matter in my example--just making the point).
Wouldn't the inverse square law only apply if, for example, he was operating with a prime lens and the distance from the front of the lens to the reflective light had physically changed when he moved from 10' away to 40' away?
I guess another way of asking the same question would be "For metering purposes, is the "value" of the reflective light that falls on the the light sensor the same at different distances, provided that by zooming in on the subject, the same light fills the frame?"
Or this: By zooming in on the subject from farther away, will the "front" of the lens act as if it was the same distance from the subject as when the photographer is physically closer to the light source by the zoom of the lens has been shortened?
If the distances are fairly close, I can see how this makes more sense. When they get further away, I can see how my hypothetical quickly falls apart.
Comments?