Basic Dimension
http://sexualreligion.blogspot.com/
Number Archive
Grass cables are the sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave:
- In our explanatory model of the transport of bodies through the Rising Star Cave are grass cables the sufficient condition. For, if the route was laid with grass cables nothing else was needed to reach Dinaledi Chamber.
- If perfect, the same would apply to echolocation and grass cables were not really needed. Then, echolocation would also be a sufficient condition for navigation to Dinaledi Chamber. But because of expected technical imperfection, echolocation can only be used as a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Fire is neither necessary nor sufficient for navigation in the Rising Star Cave. Neither necessary: In principle, having no light and by feel Homo naledi might have found his way to Dinaledi Chamber, while laying down the grass cables in the meantime. Without cables he would get lost on his return. Nor sufficient: Keeping the fire on is difficult and fire is not really transportable through Superman's Crawl and the Chute. So, just like echolocation, fire is but a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Homo naledi thought that the God of Darkness resided in the deepest part of the cave. To discover the route to Dinaledi Chamber - or whatever - he probably used fire on both sides of Superman's Crawl. The transportation of fire through Superman's Crawl is possible but very unlikely.
- Fire scared the God of Darkness and they ran out of oxygen quickly. So, Homo naledi did not use fire after the grass cables were laid. Fire is just a complementary tool to grass cables, because it is unreliable and difficult transportable. With fire alone they would get lost at a certain moment.
- After laid grass cables, they simply counted the number of cables (standard length) for orientation. Chimps can count too. But the challenging hypothesis is that they discovered elementary echolocation in the meantime, what would make distinction between large and small spaces possible. Then, echolocation would be an additional tool to grass cables for navigation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNVbM0vepYo
- Fire was not necessary if Homo naledi was practiced in echolocation before finding his route to the deepest point of the cave. And after grass cables were laid, fire was not needed any longer. So, only for laying grass cables, fire was desirable but not really necessary, it is a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Grass cables are needed because fire and echolocation are not perfect. Grass cables are the only sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave.
- In concluding, Homo naledi did not use fire on a regular basis, but instead used grass cables for navigation and possibly echolocation for overview.
- Connecting the dots, Homo naledi must have been a very intelligent and warm feeling creature. He was not randomly exploring all caves in the area, but was looking for the steepest descent to the center of the Earth. Connecting the dead with the God of Darkness was their guarantee for rebirth.
- Searching for the steepest descent they laid out standard lengths of grass-cables through all corridors of the caves. But on encountering a dead end, they further ignored that passage. Then, they pulled back all grass-cables except the first one, so they always knew they had already explored that corridor.
- When they finally left the Rising Star Cave, they pulled back all grass-cables.
- Somewhere they must have buried a big flagstone on which all routes are engraved.
All steps together
http://sexualreligion.blogspot.com/
Number Archive
Grass cables are the sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave:
- In our explanatory model of the transport of bodies through the Rising Star Cave are grass cables the sufficient condition. For, if the route was laid with grass cables nothing else was needed to reach Dinaledi Chamber.
- If perfect, the same would apply to echolocation and grass cables were not really needed. Then, echolocation would also be a sufficient condition for navigation to Dinaledi Chamber. But because of expected technical imperfection, echolocation can only be used as a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Fire is neither necessary nor sufficient for navigation in the Rising Star Cave. Neither necessary: In principle, having no light and by feel Homo naledi might have found his way to Dinaledi Chamber, while laying down the grass cables in the meantime. Without cables he would get lost on his return. Nor sufficient: Keeping the fire on is difficult and fire is not really transportable through Superman's Crawl and the Chute. So, just like echolocation, fire is but a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Homo naledi thought that the God of Darkness resided in the deepest part of the cave. To discover the route to Dinaledi Chamber - or whatever - he probably used fire on both sides of Superman's Crawl. The transportation of fire through Superman's Crawl is possible but very unlikely.
- Fire scared the God of Darkness and they ran out of oxygen quickly. So, Homo naledi did not use fire after the grass cables were laid. Fire is just a complementary tool to grass cables, because it is unreliable and difficult transportable. With fire alone they would get lost at a certain moment.
- After laid grass cables, they simply counted the number of cables (standard length) for orientation. Chimps can count too. But the challenging hypothesis is that they discovered elementary echolocation in the meantime, what would make distinction between large and small spaces possible. Then, echolocation would be an additional tool to grass cables for navigation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNVbM0vepYo
- Fire was not necessary if Homo naledi was practiced in echolocation before finding his route to the deepest point of the cave. And after grass cables were laid, fire was not needed any longer. So, only for laying grass cables, fire was desirable but not really necessary, it is a complementary tool to grass cables.
- Grass cables are needed because fire and echolocation are not perfect. Grass cables are the only sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave.
- In concluding, Homo naledi did not use fire on a regular basis, but instead used grass cables for navigation and possibly echolocation for overview.
- Connecting the dots, Homo naledi must have been a very intelligent and warm feeling creature. He was not randomly exploring all caves in the area, but was looking for the steepest descent to the center of the Earth. Connecting the dead with the God of Darkness was their guarantee for rebirth.
- Searching for the steepest descent they laid out standard lengths of grass-cables through all corridors of the caves. But on encountering a dead end, they further ignored that passage. Then, they pulled back all grass-cables except the first one, so they always knew they had already explored that corridor.
- When they finally left the Rising Star Cave, they pulled back all grass-cables.
- Somewhere they must have buried a big flagstone on which all routes are engraved.
All steps together
- In our explanatory model of the transport of bodies through the Rising Star Cave are grass-cables the sufficient condition. For, if the route was laid with grass-cables nothing else was needed to reach Dinaledi Chamber.
- If perfect, the same would apply to echolocation and grass-cables were not really needed. Then echolocation would also be a sufficient condition for navigation to Dinaledi Chamber. But because of expected technical imperfection, echolocation can only be used as a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Fire is neither necessary nor sufficient for navigation in the Rising Star Cave. Neither necessary: In principle, having no light and by feel Homo naledi might have found his way to Dinaledi Chamber, while laying down the grass-cables in the meantime. Without cables he would get lost on his return. Nor sufficient: Keeping the fire on is difficult and fire is not really transportable through Superman's Crawl and the Chute. So, just like echolocation, fire is but a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Homo naledi thought that the God of Darkness resided in the deepest part of the cave. To discover the route to Dinaledi Chamber - or whatever - he probably used fire on both sides of Superman's Crawl. The transportation of fire through Superman's Crawl is possible but very unlikely.
- Fire scared the God of Darkness and they ran out of oxygen quickly. So, Homo naledi did not use fire after the grass-cables were laid. Fire is just a complementary tool to grass-cables, because it is unreliable and difficult transportable. With fire alone they would get lost at a certain moment.
- After laid grass-cables, they simply counted the number of cables (standard length) for orientation. Chimps can count too. But the challenging hypothesis is that they discovered elementary echolocation in the meantime, what would make distinction between large and small spaces possible. Then, echolocation would be an additional tool to grass-cables for navigation.
- Fire was not necessary if Homo naledi was practiced in echolocation before finding his route to the deepest point of the cave. And after grass-cables were laid, fire was not needed any longer. So, only for laying grass-cables, fire was desirable but not really necessary, it is a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Grass-cables are needed because fire and echolocation are not perfect. Grass-cables are the only sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave.
- In concluding, Homo naledi did not use fire on a regular basis, but instead used grass-cables for navigation and possibly echolocation for overview.
- Connecting the dots, Homo naledi must have been a very intelligent and warm feeling creature. He was not randomly exploring all caves in the area, but was looking for the steepest descent to the center of the Earth. Connecting the dead with the God of Darkness was their guarantee for rebirth.
- Searching for the steepest descent they laid out standard lengths of grass-cables through all corridors of the caves. But on encountering a dead end, they further ignored that passage. Then, they pulled back all grass-cables except the first one, so they always knew they had already explored that corridor.
- When they finally left the Rising Star Cave, they pulled back all grass-cables.
- Somewhere they must have buried a big flagstone on which all routes are engraved.
- If perfect, the same would apply to echolocation and grass-cables were not really needed. Then echolocation would also be a sufficient condition for navigation to Dinaledi Chamber. But because of expected technical imperfection, echolocation can only be used as a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Fire is neither necessary nor sufficient for navigation in the Rising Star Cave. Neither necessary: In principle, having no light and by feel Homo naledi might have found his way to Dinaledi Chamber, while laying down the grass-cables in the meantime. Without cables he would get lost on his return. Nor sufficient: Keeping the fire on is difficult and fire is not really transportable through Superman's Crawl and the Chute. So, just like echolocation, fire is but a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Homo naledi thought that the God of Darkness resided in the deepest part of the cave. To discover the route to Dinaledi Chamber - or whatever - he probably used fire on both sides of Superman's Crawl. The transportation of fire through Superman's Crawl is possible but very unlikely.
- Fire scared the God of Darkness and they ran out of oxygen quickly. So, Homo naledi did not use fire after the grass-cables were laid. Fire is just a complementary tool to grass-cables, because it is unreliable and difficult transportable. With fire alone they would get lost at a certain moment.
- After laid grass-cables, they simply counted the number of cables (standard length) for orientation. Chimps can count too. But the challenging hypothesis is that they discovered elementary echolocation in the meantime, what would make distinction between large and small spaces possible. Then, echolocation would be an additional tool to grass-cables for navigation.
- Fire was not necessary if Homo naledi was practiced in echolocation before finding his route to the deepest point of the cave. And after grass-cables were laid, fire was not needed any longer. So, only for laying grass-cables, fire was desirable but not really necessary, it is a complementary tool to grass-cables.
- Grass-cables are needed because fire and echolocation are not perfect. Grass-cables are the only sufficient condition for navigation in the Rising Star Cave.
- In concluding, Homo naledi did not use fire on a regular basis, but instead used grass-cables for navigation and possibly echolocation for overview.
- Connecting the dots, Homo naledi must have been a very intelligent and warm feeling creature. He was not randomly exploring all caves in the area, but was looking for the steepest descent to the center of the Earth. Connecting the dead with the God of Darkness was their guarantee for rebirth.
- Searching for the steepest descent they laid out standard lengths of grass-cables through all corridors of the caves. But on encountering a dead end, they further ignored that passage. Then, they pulled back all grass-cables except the first one, so they always knew they had already explored that corridor.
- When they finally left the Rising Star Cave, they pulled back all grass-cables.
- Somewhere they must have buried a big flagstone on which all routes are engraved.
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