• @DaddleDew
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    694 days ago

    What if dogs like to play fetch because watching you throw something is mindblowing to them?

    • @toynbee
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      104 days ago

      I wish my dogs would play fetch.

      As an adult, I’ve had three dogs. All three of them would chase the projectile, then stand next to it and stare at me or go on to their own activities. I’m pretty sure I’ve never had a dog successfully retrieve anything.

      It makes the game a lot harder.

      • Flying SquidM
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        24 days ago

        I have had four dogs as an adult. Only the first one liked to play fetch. The other three have disappointed me and I have told them how they have let me down in this department more than once. They look at me like they don’t understand, but they know. Oh yes, they know.

    • @Klear
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      53 days ago

      I saw the frisbee getting bigger and bigger and couldn’t figure out why it does that.

      Then it hit me.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    624 days ago

    This is actually legit.

    Human brains are very, very good at instinctively understanding parabolic trajectories. In short, we’re evolved to be great at throwing stuff. Nothing else in the animal kingdom is as good at it as us, not even closely related primates like chimpanzees.

    • @Cypher
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      244 days ago

      Our shoulders are unique amongst extant apes, none of the others have the ability to throw the way we do.

      Due to our shoulders and our muscles, which are excellent for fine motor control, humans are the ballistic experts of the world.

      • @LaLuzDelSol
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        33 days ago

        Yeah I have always been amazed at the complexity of the shoulder joint. You basically have two concentric sets of muscles that do the same thing, but one is for power (the deltoid) and one is for precision (the rotator cuff). I’m oversimplifying but it is pretty unique and it’s why humans are so insanely good with their arms/hands. Looking at other apes trying to hammer a nail for instance, there’s no comparison.

      • @jaybone
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        34 days ago

        But if you put them in a zoo, they will learn to throw feces.

  • @Shardikprime
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    274 days ago

    Wait till they learn about the infinite food glitch

  • @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    Humans are fucking unfair man. They win in so many different ways. You’re smaller than me? Lemme yeet this rock. You’re bigger than me and running away? It’s cool, I’ll catch up later; you’ll pass out before I do. You’re bigger than me and running towards me? Sweet, I just turned this rock and stick into a pair of claws that would make a lion blush, and my homies all got em too.

    Oh yeah and those plants we all eat? I figured out how to make more of them! And I told all my friends how to do it to, because we have LANGUAGE!

    And then before long they’re all “see that big shiny rock in the sky? Yeah, I pissed on it”

  • @someguy3
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    274 days ago

    I thought it was spears. Guess it could be rocks. I threw a pinecone at a magpie to shoo it away and I think it broke his brain to see something coming at him like that.

  • @[email protected]
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    234 days ago

    Imagine how crazy it’d be if you found a way to attach a STICK to the rock and make the rock sharper…

      • @[email protected]
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        214 days ago

        I remember at some museum they said it took about 10.000 years for pre-humans to move from sharpening one side of a stone to sharpening both sides.

        We went from using sharpened stones to landing on the moon in the same timeframe.

        • @[email protected]
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          244 days ago

          So here’s the thing: we don’t know that, really. If we find a spear that has one side sharpened and it’s dated 40,000 bc, then we find another spear and both sides are sharpened dated 30,000 bc, it may appear that way… But we literally have a vague guess at best. If 1 million years from now an archeologist finds a kitchen knife and concludes that in the 2000’s we were still figuring out double sided knives, then they would be hilariously wrong.

  • @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    First it was the the thicc asses (for long running & creepy stalking), then came the biceps & shoulder combo.

    I bet we first developed such unique throwing abilities just to fling our poop further.

    (Similarly, I actually think we bred our thicc butts to twerk better.)

    • @Shardikprime
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      44 days ago

      I like big paleolithic butts and I cannot lie

  • I Cast Fist
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    154 days ago

    Some years later…

    GUYS! GUYS!! HOLY SHIT YOU WON’T BELIEVE!!! I threw a rock, it hit another rock and there were these sparks!!

    • @Moc
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      104 days ago

      Careful that tech is a slippery slope to world destruction

  • Flying SquidM
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    84 days ago

    As a capuchin monkey myself, I am happy just throwing feces, thank you.

  • @vanderbilt
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    24 days ago

    Ardipithicus moment. Oopsee I have developed organized hunting and weapons usage 😇

  • @UnPassive
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    24 days ago

    I’m harrier than that…