Lloyd
Well-known member
“Shotgunning: The art and science” by Bob Brister was the first book on shooting that I bought and was for me at least was the obvious choice.
The book is described as authority and that no other book can make the claim of being scientific, the works being based on years of testing.
Personally, I found the book disappointing. It does not really delve much into the laws of physics or ballistic nuances, rather its more of a rudimentary ‘Fred in the shed’ study and lacks the robustness of well designed experiments, cross referencing and peer review that scientists would normally see as a de facto procedure.
That said, despite my disappointment for the lack of due process, it does make interesting reading in parts.
One of the issues I have with this subject is that we humans make broad assumptions about physics based on what is easily observable. There’s nothing wrong in that and it’s quite normal, but it is however a deeply flawed way of understanding what is actually going on.
Its not that we are stupid. On the contrary, our brains are very good at making rapid decisions based on the inputs of sight, sound, smell, touch. In fact, I would say if this were not the case, we would find shooting near impossible, and thus Shotgunning is really an art, while the really physics exist, they are near useless when it comes to killing the target.
As a simple illustration, below is a screenshot of two droplets (about in this case 2mm across) of liquid, connected by a thin conduit. It is quite usual for even the most knowledgeable to assume that fluid would flow from the larger droplet to the smaller one. The fact is the flow is from the smaller to the larger droplet.
This counterintuitive action can be observed and can be calculated, but our intuition is contrary to the facts. The second image shows a “race” whereby the small droplet wins the race, despite the fact that it is filled the last in the pipette game sequence.
This I believe is commonplace in shooting in that what we often think is correct may not actually be so.
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