How do we aim at the most fundamental level?
I think that no matter what method or system an individual uses, our brains work pretty much the same way for all of us when it comes to aiming: it's all memorization and "picture matching". We build "picture libraries" of successful shots and try to find the closest match in the library for the shot we're trying now.
Finding the matching "shot picture" in our picture libraries for the current shot we're trying to aim is done by our subconscious "librarian". We're not consciously aware of this process - we don't see each library shot picture as its compared with the real shot at hand. If we did it consciously each shot would take hours to decide and shoot - but our subconscious can do it in a flash. Because we're not consciously aware of the aiming process, it can seem as if we're groping in the dark for the answer - I think this is what we call "aiming by feel", and I think it's done by everybody on every shot.
So what about the different aiming methods and systems used by individual players? I think these are "facilitators" for the "by feel" aiming we all do. We use different aiming methods and systems as "Dewey decimal systems" for our picture libraries, helping us file and catalogue "shot pictures" as we experience them and then helping us quickly and accurately find the right match when needed for each new shot.
It's a good thing we have the subconscious to do this - if we tried to do it "manually" (consciously) we'd become quickly overwhelmed and bogged down by the mountain of data to process. But we can consciously help our subconscious "computer" with the memorizing-matching task by adopting habits of consciously categorizing the shots we see at the table. This could be as simple as "thick" vs. "thin" or it could include as much more detail as the conscious mind can handle in the heat of battle (for example, comparing cut angles with "system alignments"). This is how I think "aiming systems" and "aiming by feel" are really parts of the same thing.
pj
chgo
I think that no matter what method or system an individual uses, our brains work pretty much the same way for all of us when it comes to aiming: it's all memorization and "picture matching". We build "picture libraries" of successful shots and try to find the closest match in the library for the shot we're trying now.
Finding the matching "shot picture" in our picture libraries for the current shot we're trying to aim is done by our subconscious "librarian". We're not consciously aware of this process - we don't see each library shot picture as its compared with the real shot at hand. If we did it consciously each shot would take hours to decide and shoot - but our subconscious can do it in a flash. Because we're not consciously aware of the aiming process, it can seem as if we're groping in the dark for the answer - I think this is what we call "aiming by feel", and I think it's done by everybody on every shot.
So what about the different aiming methods and systems used by individual players? I think these are "facilitators" for the "by feel" aiming we all do. We use different aiming methods and systems as "Dewey decimal systems" for our picture libraries, helping us file and catalogue "shot pictures" as we experience them and then helping us quickly and accurately find the right match when needed for each new shot.
It's a good thing we have the subconscious to do this - if we tried to do it "manually" (consciously) we'd become quickly overwhelmed and bogged down by the mountain of data to process. But we can consciously help our subconscious "computer" with the memorizing-matching task by adopting habits of consciously categorizing the shots we see at the table. This could be as simple as "thick" vs. "thin" or it could include as much more detail as the conscious mind can handle in the heat of battle (for example, comparing cut angles with "system alignments"). This is how I think "aiming systems" and "aiming by feel" are really parts of the same thing.
pj
chgo