Are people biologically capable of sitting in a theatre in front of an image of an oncoming train?
The whole reason you’d put an image of an oncoming train in a movie would be that it does stress the audience. A little stress can be fun.
I’m not so sure that people would be very comfortable with cows if cows were in the habit of running nearly silently out of nowhere and passing them 2 meters away at 40 km/h. I think after one cow did that in front of me and another one did it behind me a second or two later, while a stream of cows whooshed by on the cross street, I’d start to get pretty nervous about cows. I guess maybe I’d get used to it if I’d had years of experience to show me that cows unerringly avoided me. But I wouldn’t bet too much on it.
But that’s neither here nor there; I don’t think the vehicles could reliably miss the pedestrians to begin with, and you seem to agree.
Where? No, I think that’d be fairly easy, though not something you’d want them to have to do too often, I’d guess it’d require them all to slow down a lot.
The whole reason you’d put an image of an oncoming train in a movie would be that it does stress the audience. A little stress can be fun.
I’m not so sure that people would be very comfortable with cows if cows were in the habit of running nearly silently out of nowhere and passing them 2 meters away at 40 km/h. I think after one cow did that in front of me and another one did it behind me a second or two later, while a stream of cows whooshed by on the cross street, I’d start to get pretty nervous about cows. I guess maybe I’d get used to it if I’d had years of experience to show me that cows unerringly avoided me. But I wouldn’t bet too much on it.
But that’s neither here nor there; I don’t think the vehicles could reliably miss the pedestrians to begin with, and you seem to agree.
Where? No, I think that’d be fairly easy, though not something you’d want them to have to do too often, I’d guess it’d require them all to slow down a lot.