The Dresden Files > DF Spoilers
Who really killed ... BG spoilers!!!!
Mira:
--- Quote from: Arjan on October 18, 2020, 10:50:33 AM ---At the end sure but the bad trigger discipline was mentioned so many times in two books.
--- End quote ---
That could very well be, however his mind was broken before hand, not to the extent it was when he actually shot Murphy, but it was headed that way. He had convinced himself at some point that Murphy and Harry were behind everything. He saw Murphy, he saw Harry, his mind screamed, "danger Will Robinson," he felt he had to stop them. There was nothing rational in the thought process, so bad trigger discipline united with paranoia, equals death for someone.
Arjan:
--- Quote from: Mira on October 18, 2020, 12:13:55 PM ---That could very well be, however his mind was broken before hand, not to the extent it was when he actually shot Murphy, but it was headed that way. He had convinced himself at some point that Murphy and Harry were behind everything. He saw Murphy, he saw Harry, his mind screamed, "danger Will Robinson," he felt he had to stop them. There was nothing rational in the thought process, so bad trigger discipline united with paranoia, equals death for someone.
--- End quote ---
And remember what happened when Bradly accused him of bad trigger discipline. Rudolph asked him whose side he was on.
The_Sibelis:
--- Quote from: Mira on October 18, 2020, 10:45:46 AM ---The man has totally lost it mentally, training, no matter how good is going to compensate for that. His finger and hand may have muscle memory, but they need the brain to power them.
--- End quote ---
as someone whose studied martial arts for years,(including under a guy with a degree in pyschoneuralimmunology(? If Im recalling my big words correctly)) let me assure you. There is no such thing as muscle memory. No memory is stored in the muscle.
And let me elaborate on my point, I have fired a gun only a handful of times, the first thing my untrained brain is going to do if a gun misfires when I didn't pull the trigger, or feel the trigger bump, my reaction is going to be just about the same as Rudy's. His reaction is not right and cannot be explained away with lack of discipline or even a generic breakdown of mental capacity, which would have precluded the reaction.
Arjan:
--- Quote from: The_Sibelis on October 18, 2020, 01:47:02 PM ---as someone whose studied martial arts for years,(including under a guy with a degree in pyschoneuralimmunology(? If Im recalling my big words correctly)) let me assure you. There is no such thing as muscle memory. No memory is stored in the muscle.
And let me elaborate on my point, I have fired a gun only a handful of times, the first thing my untrained brain is going to do if a gun misfires when I didn't pull the trigger, or feel the trigger bump, my reaction is going to be just about the same as Rudy's. His reaction is not right and cannot be explained away with lack of discipline or even a generic breakdown of mental capacity, which would have precluded the reaction.
--- End quote ---
You don’t get it from a few lessons bu I have experienced it when I played the violin. It needs training.
A simple search on the internet will give loads of results, I just give you the first one:
https://www.sierraelement.com/blog/the-importance-of-muscle-memory-in-firearms-training.html
The_Sibelis:
Let me reiterate, it does not exist
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychoneuroimmunology#:~:text=Psychoneuroimmunology%20(PNI)%2C%20also%20referred,systems%20of%20the%20human%20body.
It's a misnomer, misapplied information to the wrong conclusion, ect.
And all those things are very important in martial arts... And my teacher used to laugh at people who used the term muscle memory, especially other artists.
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