That's rather different from what I was talking about but, in any event, it doesn't work for me. In fact, if I am concentrating on the distant object, I can't really tell if there are one or two fingers at 6-12" with re-focussing onto them (in which case I obviously see just one).Concentrate on something distant, such as the clock or light switch, then without breaking that concentration pass a single finger across your vision, it may work better if you try it say 6-12" in front of your face.
Having said that, it wouldn't surprise me if what you said happened, since stereoscopic vision only works with the whatever one in concentrating/focussed on - the brain then combines the two slightly different images from the two eyes to produce a single'3D' one. Something much closer will be out of focus, so the two different images will not get combined properly, so one might well see 'two fingers' if they are much closer than whatever one is focussed on. However, as said, that does not work for me.
In any event, this is not what II described as the way of determining eye dominance. It is a totally standard test and, as I said, one holds a finger at arm's length, in line with some distant object, and then closes each eye in turn. It was in response to that that morqthan a said that he saw two fingers or two distant objects, and I still don't understand that.

