why do you climb?
[quote="It must be a very broad term to include instinctual activities, natural (uncontrolable) bodily functions, and contemplated (learned and not natural) activities.[/quote]
yep, I could have said it better . . . but that was the general gist . . . activities characteristic of the species. I was musing and kidding around.
I think climbing is an artifact of our more primate past that shows up ontologically in our toddler stages. Somebody get that kid down from there, she is going to fall and break something! The instinct to climb is like the rooting instinct, put an object in an infant's palm and it closes on it hard. This instinct keeps toddlers on hairy mommas while they traverse the middle canopy. <ala Homer Simpson, ahhhhhh! HAIRY MOMMAS!!>
I doubt the braggadocio and the gear fetishes that come along with climbing are instinctual. I just wonder how far from the animal's shadow it all is though.
yep, I could have said it better . . . but that was the general gist . . . activities characteristic of the species. I was musing and kidding around.
I think climbing is an artifact of our more primate past that shows up ontologically in our toddler stages. Somebody get that kid down from there, she is going to fall and break something! The instinct to climb is like the rooting instinct, put an object in an infant's palm and it closes on it hard. This instinct keeps toddlers on hairy mommas while they traverse the middle canopy. <ala Homer Simpson, ahhhhhh! HAIRY MOMMAS!!>
I doubt the braggadocio and the gear fetishes that come along with climbing are instinctual. I just wonder how far from the animal's shadow it all is though.