True about babies, but learning how to DO, not learning how to DESCRIBE (accurately) nor learning how to TEACH/PROGRAM. Of the various ways to learn something, where you put "mimicry"? (Programs, robots can mimic.) And what others can you think of?Montana St Alum wrote: ↑Sun Apr 30, 2023 7:12 pmInteresting, but there's a reason human babies walk before they talk. We are imitative. See what that guy does in the GIF? Do that!
What if someone mimics (or apes) the wrong example, or the example wrong? (Like turning downhill and bringing skis even mid-turn as you're pointed straight downhill and switching the lead foot and expecting to CONTINUE turning the same direction??? Then how do you switch directions?)
I've also heard there are those who can operate a tool, build a tool, craft a tool, and design a tool -- abilities of different levels.
Engineers learn this all the time, like they "walk" to work but have far more difficulty "programming a robot" to walk.
Likewise there are those that teach humans how to do things (like skiing) that go on gut and feeling rather than empirical data, which along with other factors is what separates science from pseudo-science. From what I gather from the OP, the book he has is the latter (P-S) at least in this respect which should call the rest into greater question.
Again, if the OP (BFB) isn't going to participate in his own thread, should we?