It is absolutely good for you to hone the skill of noticing when you need a tool, and making the tool you need out of whatever is lying around. That’s the difference between “hit it with a rock” and “make a stone tool”—you’re changing the tool from your environment to be a better fit for the specific problem you’re trying to solve. The skill of changing and customizing what our environments provide us is, of late, discouraged by advertisers.
Probably, though, tool and skill are the essential combination for this kind of agency. If you don’t have the skill to know how something needs to be hit with a rock, then trying to hit it with a rock will be (sorry) hit-or-miss. You have to both know how your problem wants to be solved, and know how your tool wants to behave, in order to combine them properly. (anthromorphization here is intentional—our brains have a lot of social hardware that we can run non-social stuff on if we wrap it in framing compatible with the social interfaces)
Most recent time I’ve used a stone tool was grabbing a river rock out of my pile of them to hone a scythe blade. I have more logs than rocks lying around where I’m at, so often a stick instead of a stone is my go-to improvised tool for applying a bit more force than I would be able to without its help.
It is absolutely good for you to hone the skill of noticing when you need a tool, and making the tool you need out of whatever is lying around. That’s the difference between “hit it with a rock” and “make a stone tool”—you’re changing the tool from your environment to be a better fit for the specific problem you’re trying to solve. The skill of changing and customizing what our environments provide us is, of late, discouraged by advertisers.
Probably, though, tool and skill are the essential combination for this kind of agency. If you don’t have the skill to know how something needs to be hit with a rock, then trying to hit it with a rock will be (sorry) hit-or-miss. You have to both know how your problem wants to be solved, and know how your tool wants to behave, in order to combine them properly. (anthromorphization here is intentional—our brains have a lot of social hardware that we can run non-social stuff on if we wrap it in framing compatible with the social interfaces)
Most recent time I’ve used a stone tool was grabbing a river rock out of my pile of them to hone a scythe blade. I have more logs than rocks lying around where I’m at, so often a stick instead of a stone is my go-to improvised tool for applying a bit more force than I would be able to without its help.