Angra Mainyu
Veteran Member
If it's the former, maybe so, but then there would still be a difficulty for most people - who probably wouldn't take the trouble of doing all the training.You mean, with training one can extend the ring finger without extending the little one, or that I can learn to play the piano?
If it's the former, maybe so, but even then, it wouldn't be easy, so it would still be a difficulty for most people if they want to count with their fingers extending them like that. But the variant I suggested avoids the matter, and needs no training.
If it's the latter, I'm not going to argue the point.
Training, as small magic people have shown, results in convincing ease of movement for those who practice the discipline. You considered playing the piano with your toes?
And I've not seriously considered playing the piano with either my fingers or my toes.
That's not what I meant. I meant extending their fingers like that would still be difficult for most people - most people do not train in the way you suggested.Base two complicates counting? Really?
That aside, I do think (speculatively) base two would complicate counting for most people, with respect to base ten. But that's a speculative hypothesis about human psychology, not the issue I was talking about.
Last edited: