Actually we have been trained in how to avoid accidents. And yet accidents still happen so not everyone takes to the training as well as others.Thank you! If you have a moment, please see my reply to John in #104.
We have been humans for a long time. Our ability to process complex data has been around for a long time, too. Action - Reaction. Instant Action - Instant Reaction. We are never trained in how to avoid a high speed automobile accident, we just do it. My third baseman is 28 years old. He has been playing baseball since he was 3 1/2 when his Dad taught him how to play catch. No orientation is required, no processing, only reaction. He knows everything there is to know about that moment and he knows what has to be done. The ball will always be round and first base will always be where it was yesterday.
In pool, there are two balls and they are sitting very, very still.
If someone has been doing something intently since they were three then they certainly ought to be able to perform most tasks required for that something without any struggle.
Are you going to maintain that there are not any techniques taught to baseball players? Let's do an experiment with five year olds and teach some of them to catch and throw and give the others no instruction and see who has better results in a week.
Of course some people have more aptitude for some tasks. My daughter can sing, I can't. But she can't sing professionally because she doesn't know how to do a lot of what needs to be known in order to be a pro. Things she will need to learn.
Humans are animals. Animals that are engaged in tasks that have nothing to do with survival. The breadth of human ability is great and runs from great strength to great weakness and from great intelligence to great impairment. We use our brains to create compensations for our physical limitations.
We create rules and tools and techniques that get honed and improved over and over. We do this because that is how our species has evolved. We are builders and problem solvers. We cooperate across all boundaries.
All this to say that no man is an island and no person who scoops up a line drive at third and whips it to first in a dazzling display of physical movement got there by themselves.