** Flying on Instruments **
the vision of bats
Consider also sound based sonar vision in bats, smell warfare in skunks, porcupines, or the dam making ability of the beaver, or general consciousness in animals, abstract thinking and self-reflection in humans, or other inventions such as insulation, infrared sensors, hypodermic needles, etc. etc., we could go on and on. There are also all sorts of useful biologically active chemicals such as antibiotics, analgesics, emetics, diuretics, laxatives, tranquilizers, contraceptives, hallucinogens, pain killers, antifreeze, antidotes and many, many more.the vision of bats
Not to mention, the vast diversity of early creatures found in the fossil record. I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that every conceivable sort of creature and biological system possible on earth appears to have been actualized.

Given enough data (and continued updated info) a mathematician could sit down with a pencil and paper and some calculus equations and figure out how far the bat was from the object and with the right info could even figure out if the object the bat is heading toward is stationary or moving toward the bat or away from it. But that would take time and if the bat took that much time he'd be flying into trees, poles and other things. We have developed computers that can do this very quickly. That's what the bat needs. The bat has a computer in his head that can figure out that information very quickly. It knows what it is heading for without being able to physically see. It's flying by instruments (as pilots would say). The computer in the bat's head processes the flux of data from the instruments and forms an image of the environment in the bat's consciousness.

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Footnotes