Killer Cyborg wrote:Dog_O_War wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:Dog_O_War wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:Are bows somehow supposed to require less training than guns?
Or to rely more on natural skill?
Yes. give a caveman a bow and arrow and he'll atleast attempt to stab his prey with the pointy arrow. Yet you give him a loaded gun (with the safety on) and all's he's got is a club.
I don't see how clubbing somebody with a gun requires more skill than stabbing somebody with an arrow.
In fact, if anything, I'd say it's the reverse, simply because stabbing is not as natural a movement as clubbing.
The point of this was that the person with the arrow is atleast performing the type of attack that the arrow performs (re: bow puts pointy shaft into target; using the arrow as a dagger accomplishes the same desired result) versus the gun.
Irrelevant.
Hardly.
Offer an unloaded gun (bullets on the side) with the safety on to someone that has never seen one and he will never figure it out. Do the same with a bow and he'll have gotten it in a couple of hours. Offer one of the first guns to a common guy on the street (powder, wadding, ball all seperate) and tell him to figure it out, then offer him a bow and arrow an count the seconds before he puts two and two together.
The gun if far more complicated than the average person would like to believe; if a bow breaks, it is immediately apparent where and how and what is needed to fix it. But you bust a spring on a gun and the average person will spend hours trying to decern the problem.
The ease of use firearms perport now is also an illusion. Put a gun infront of a person that has only seen them used on tv with a dozen different bullets, all slightly different and as him to fire the gun by choosing one and pulling the trigger - won't get it in the first try. Meanwhile I could carve an arrow out of a broomstick and fire it from any bow - it won't work well, but it will work. Ease of use and simplicity of design. The only reason the average person today can really even work a gun is because our society is rife with them.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Also, our very evolution has dictated what was to develop naturally; the bow came first and has been around for more than 2000 years, versus the gun. We've developed the gun into a more natural weapon, but look at the very history of it; from the first basic models (which most everyone will have trouble figuring out) and the bow in comparison. Unfortunately the bow has reached its evolutionary "peak" so to speak. As for ease of use; that is an entirely different matter.
Also irrelevant.
Again, if the gun were the more simple tool between it and the bow, then it would have developed first.
Naturally. This is also
relevant, just like the above.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Sure the modern gun may have that "pick up and pull the trigger" quality, but so does a sword - except that you can tell the difference right away between the noob and the expert.
I never said that you couldn't; just that guns are easier to use than bow.
So you know how to assemble a muzzle-loader from parts? How about a bow? Can you say the same for the average person?
Once assembled, does the average person just pull the trigger and bullets come out? Or do they have to figure out how that works too? Is the bow easier to figure out yet?
Why is this relevant? One of these tools has had to become more complicated to become "easy to use". The other has remained basically unchanged for thousands of years. The reason (I'm betting) is ease of use.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:Hell, I'd say guns are a lot easier either way: they're just point and shoot.
Far more intuitive than trying to screw around with pulling an arrow towards you in order to launch it in an arc at the target.
As I said, that is after major advances in the technology of the gun. Can you say the early bow and the early gun still compare in which is easier to use?
Again; doesn't matter, and doesn't really have jack to do with the discussion.
It has everything to do with the discussion; no gun type, model, year, etc... were designated. You assume a modern pistol; this only makes you wrong and inaccurate in the statement that "guns are just point and shoot". I can say that bows are exactly the same way and you will find no error in my summary. But when you break the two down, guns are far more than "just point and shoot" while bows are barely more than that statement. The bow is the simple weapon.
Killer Cyborg wrote:Here's something else to contemplate; if the gun were not such a superior weapon, would not the bow have seen additional evolutionary advances in both ease of use (like and automatic pull and auto-loader), and power - such as well, I guess they have put bombs on the end of them now (Wyle E. Coyote had something I guess).
Dynamite, ala the Dukes of Hazard.
But it would STILL be the more difficult weapon to aim and use.
Aim, no. The principles between the two (gun and bow) are exactly the same. Arrow shaft becomes gun barrel, site down the shaft/line the iron-sites up, release/squeeze.
Use, no. One is quicker, but speed does not equal simplicity.