

How did you identify it?


How did you identify it?


Ah, I hoped it would cover a different angle. As a left-footed, right handed person, I was excited about how “learning to walk” affects handedness, but sounds like this research is more about how it evolved.
EDIT for info: My mother is left handed and my father right handed. Given that he worked a lot, I think I learned some things from my mother. I also use my cutlery “the wrong way around” and had to try writing with both hands because teachers suspected I was left handed, but dropped it at some point. Nowadays left hand writing looks like I am 10 years old ^^ Foot wise it was more clear though. I always preferred using my left leg.


Depends what you mean by AI and by legitimate.
So far it seems to be super useful for the following topics:
If you consider moral in “legitimate”, you might dislike programming, customer support and writing checkers as these replace jobs. However, I strongly believe in AI tax and redistributing that money towards everyone especially affected jobs (artists, …). I feel like artificially limiting the applicability will just be a loss to the global market unless something similar is achieved by figuring out the copyright issues.


Hope the “off” state is brake on
I hate how these terms are used colloquially. Here are wikipedia’s definitions:
Conservatism is a cultural, social, and political philosophy and ideology that seeks to promote and preserve traditional institutions, customs, and values.
Liberalism is a political and moral philosophy based on the rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, right to private property, and equality before the law.
So no. The definitions are very different. Now you can say that liberals and conservatives are similar in your country or that you live in liberalism and therefore trying to keep it is conservatism, but there is no necessary overlap afaik.
Got a few confused looks in sports :P and was not very helpful for stuff like long jump were run up was always explained for right-footed only. I’ve added some additional information to my initial post.