Discussion:
Humans - "bipedal animals"?
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Mario Petrinovic
2024-10-14 06:50:02 UTC
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Are we really that much more bipedal than other animals? No, we
aren't. What distinguishes us from others is that we *cannot* be
quadrupedal, this is our characteristic, we cannot be quadrupedal.
https://youtube.com/shorts/NLk9neGyheM?si=DzVuMfP8D7igswHB
Did we become "bipedal" so that we can look over the grass? No, this
doesn't make you "bipedal":
https://youtube.com/shorts/qiXw5_JD59g?si=97nQkAepJh3iac5S
Kyonshi
2024-10-26 22:53:56 UTC
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        Are we really that much more bipedal than other animals? No, we
aren't. What distinguishes us from others is that we *cannot* be
quadrupedal, this is our characteristic, we cannot be quadrupedal.
https://youtube.com/shorts/NLk9neGyheM?si=DzVuMfP8D7igswHB
        Did we become "bipedal" so that we can look over the grass? No,
https://youtube.com/shorts/qiXw5_JD59g?si=97nQkAepJh3iac5S
kangaroos are also bipedal
Mario Petrinovic
2024-10-26 23:59:05 UTC
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Post by Kyonshi
         Are we really that much more bipedal than other animals? No,
we aren't. What distinguishes us from others is that we *cannot* be
quadrupedal, this is our characteristic, we cannot be quadrupedal.
https://youtube.com/shorts/NLk9neGyheM?si=DzVuMfP8D7igswHB
         Did we become "bipedal" so that we can look over the grass?
https://youtube.com/shorts/qiXw5_JD59g?si=97nQkAepJh3iac5S
kangaroos are also bipedal
Yes. And they don't have different pelvis or the s-curve.

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