number4096 said:
The guy was just that badass.(Why a tree branch managed to kill something a gun has difficulty killing?Badassness.)
No, but because of something else.
It's called... Luck. A statistical anomaly. Or would you be ready to bet that if we put that guy back into the same situation again, he would again win?
I most certainly wouldn't. The one thing you learn about statistics is that there are always data points at the edges of the curve. This is one of those one in a billion cases.
And when you are talking on a species level, we are talking about the survival of the fittest.
Fittest does not mean best fighter. Fitness does not mean strongest. Fitness means: those that survive to reproduce more than others.
There are animals that are faster than us. Stronger than us. Better stalkers than us. That can run farther than us. That have sharper teeth and better claws. That have thicker hides. That have better eyes.
But they all share one common trait: They are specialized creatures. A lion cannot live on berries and leaves, should its hunt go awry. We can. A bear cannot live in warmer climates, we can. A hawk must eat a whole lot more than we do, to have the energy to fly. It can't starve for two days, we can. A gazelle cannot at times of hunger, switch its food source to meat.
And most importantly, they do not have the combination of memory, intelligence, cunning and planning and
abstract thinking that we do. They cannot eat both berries and leaves and create trap-pits for animals. They cannot hunt both the gazelle, wild boar and river salmon with equal proficiency. They cannot attack from a hundred paces out, see if the attack hits and then retreat if needed.
They cannot steal the eggs of a bird from its nest, then gather the mushrooms under the tree.
Mammoths did not die out because we hunted them to extinction.
They died out, because they were overspecialized animals that could not adapt to the changed circumstances when their overspecialized environment was no more.
There is a reason Zhao yun was recorded in history and not whoever knew how to use spear at the time.Or that Oda Nobunaga called Honda Tadakatsu a samurai amongst samurais rather a general amongst generals.If anyone was just as much a capable fighter as Honda Tadakatsu then Honda Tadakatsu would have never been recorded.
Yes. But just as Julius Caesar was recorded. Just as Alexander the Great was recorded.
Because history remembers
leaders of armies, the commanders. Not the individual soldiers. History remembers those who won, instead of those thousands others that lost. Julius Caesar is not remembered because he was a good fighter, he is remembered because he was an exceptional general. Zhao yun is not remembered because he was good with a spear. He was, but that isn't enough. Rather, he is remembered because he was a general during a time of several great battles.
Zhao yun is remembered, because he brought victories to armies. And then he became a legend, because it was decided that dramatizing his life-story, painting him as super-human would make a good drama.
And so the Romance of the Three Kingdoms was written. There is about as much truth in that book as there is in Lord Of The Rings: very little, and buried deep within.
And all later sources, rather than being based upon the historic documents that mention him in a few sentences here and there, they base him upon this overdramatizewd piece of fiction.
And thus a legend is born.
And yet, despite being remembered in written historical records, we have no historically verifiable evidence for their supposedly heroic, inhuman deeds. We have tales of such. We have folklore and legends, word of mouth. Nothing more.
And we all know that those cannot be trusted. The more extraordinary the claim, the more extraordinary the evidence is required to believe that claim. And I for one refuse to accept that Miyamoto could walk on air, that Achilleus was invulnerable, that Thor could throw lighting from his hammer. Because that is what I would have to believe, should I stop requiring evidence.