Chapter 0084 When will the task be completed?

This isn't flattery.

Liszt himself felt that his talent was extraordinarily potent.

Perhaps his body, by nature, had strong lineage, superior genes, far surpassing those of ordinary people. Now with a soul that surpassed the era's thinking, his grasp of principles allowed him a clearer touch on the essence of cultivation.

Others learned archery, perhaps solely through practice and experience.

In their minds, there was no conception of air resistance, parabolic trajectories, inertia, or Newton's three laws of motion.

Yet he could, through some simple laws of physics, discern the trajectory of an arrow's flight and thus more quickly master how to shape muscle memory to rapidly learn archery skills.

What he lacked was just control over technical details.

Analyze failure.

Improve technique.

Bend the bow and shoot arrows again.

Liszt felt that such pure cultivation, once one delved into it, was also a kind of painful yet joyful indulgence.