A baseball player does not calculate wind or gravity to catch a ball. Their brain locks the optical angle and adjusts body speed, solving complex calculus with a flawless, subconscious reflex.
If you ask a physicist to calculate the exact trajectory of a baseball falling from the sky, they require differential equations, wind resistance metrics, and velocity data. Yet, a professional outfielder simply runs and catches it without doing a single conscious calculation. This is not magic; it is the absolute brilliance of the Gaze Heuristic.
Instead of computing the ball's parabolic arc, the human brain utilizes a brilliant, energy-saving evolutionary shortcut. The outfielder instinctively locks their vision onto the ball and adjusts their running speed to maintain a constant optical angle of gaze. By keeping this geometric angle completely stable, the brain ensures the player and the ball will physically intersect at the exact same moment.
This cognitive science book explores the beauty of bounded rationality. We dissect how the human nervous system completely bypasses complex physics, opting instead for quick, subconscious optical tricks that guarantee survival in a chaotic, fast-moving world.
Trust your biological software. Discover how your brain secretly solves impossible mathematical equations by ignoring the data entirely.
Allen Hoffman
Author
gaze heuristic psychology bounded rationality science cognitive shortcuts behavioral economics subconscious mathematical processing interceptive task biology visual tracking mechanics