On 5/1/19, 12:06 PM, "uǝlƃ ☣" <geprope...@gmail.com> wrote:

 <   All that text is merely to provide context that my guess is your 
depth-firsty commitment to a reasonably trustworthy reductionism isn't as 
depth-firsty as you think it is. It's more like those massive muscles in your 
back or leg that attract all the attention, but that are useless without the 
thousands of little control tissues providing the context that allows the big 
guys to do their work.  >

That's probably so.  One would hope that one gets better over time at choosing 
when to sink one's teeth in to something.   

Oh, this is kind of an unpleasant story but it speaks to the emotional side of 
this.   I may have mentioned it before in some other context.   I'm driving 
home after some errands on a Saturday and I see this woman kicking a dog in the 
middle of Canyon road.   It's a pit bull and it is mauling her smaller, 
defenseless dog.   Several people are trying to figure out how to stop this, 
and we drag the mess off to the side of the road and try to start to pry open 
the pit bull's jaws.   This wasn't some mix of pit bull, this was the real 
thing.   It didn't think it was strong, it was strong.  It was not an easy task 
to slow the pit bull down, even with several men with gloves.  An older man 
that had probably rescued the dog had been knocked over and was struggling to 
collect himself.  He could see his dog was going to be put down and was 
distraught.    The woman was also of course distraught seeing her pet being 
killed.   

But the fascinating part of this was watching the pit bull work.   It would 
slow down for a moment just to see what the humans were doing and go from one 
target to the next when the time was right.   It was _totally_ committed.    We 
did eventually free the smaller dog and isolated it in a safe place until it 
could be taken to the vet.    The pit bull did not show any indication of 
hostility toward a human, it just wouldn't budge on what it was doing.   In 
spite of the awfulness of it all, I couldn't help admire that 
single-mindedness.   

Marcus 

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