Quantum mechanics tells us it's impossible to reliably photograph anything because our subject can be in more than one place at a time and that the act of recording them will alter their existance. Nonetheless, these quantum errors are generally not meaningful in real-world applications.
I'm not sure if this thread has helped clear up Stu W's confusion. Reichman's example, linked above, is interesting. But how useful is to someone learning how to handle a camera? This optical illusion is achieved by dramatically altering the camera-to-subject distance for each photograph, thereby dramatically changing perspective. The 17mm view in his example would be unachievable with a rangefinder because the lens is just a few inches from the foreground subject.
If you pick up a camera and start using it, the difference in depth of field from one lens to another becomes very important. Elsewise, we wouldn't have other forum threads discussing whether or not a rangefiinder can be accurately focused beyond the 90mm focal length and why the base length on the Bessas should have been longer.
In common usuage, depth of field becomes very important when combined with changing perspectives, and those depth-of-field markings on lenses are critical to learning good photography. For example, if you sit down and READ your depth of field scales, you'll see what JAAPV missed up until now -- that the zone of acceptible focus is 2/3 longer behind the subject than in front of it. Those scales are calibrated for distance from the camera's film plane to the subject, so changing lenses is an act of changing perspectives. (So is walking around.) If I'm taking a picture of kids in my living room, my 21mm lens focused at six feet and shot at f/4.5 will give me a depth of field of measurable in meters -- about 3.5 feet to 50 feet; a 28mm lens focused to six feet away at f/4 will give a depth of field of about 4-feet-9-inches to 8 feet. DOF for my 50mm lens focused at six feet at f/4 is 5.5 feet to 6.5 feet. With the 85mm lens, DOF is 4 inches. With the 135mm lens, DOF is 1.5 inches.