PsychoSarah
Chaotic Neutral
No, the opposite. I'm saying cats determine if they can make a jump by trial and error, no equations of any sort. Muscle memory in the cerebellum, not conscious calculation in the cerebrum. Same goes for humans. In fact, a person can have a stroke that takes away the capacity for math, but as long as the cerebellum is fine, they won't be diminished in any of their physical skills. Heck, even with that guy that had his hippocampus removed that could no longer consciously make new long term memories could learn physical skills like playing the piano.Ok.. so you're saying that you and cats take multiple factors into consideration before determining a possible outcome? Like a X amount of force.. multiplied by Y amount of distance.. at angle of Z.. = Jump calculation?
In short, the part of the brain responsible for jumping and the part of the brain responsible for understanding gravity are entirely separate.
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