As a math guy, this is something I've been pondering for a while. Is there a limit to how fast we can swim. For instance, I remember a discussion point a while back was that there was no physical way a human could run the 100m in less than 9 seconds, that the forces you would create within your body in order to run that fast would cause you muscles to tear and bones to shatter.
In swimming we're seeing a HUGE leap forward in technology as it pertains both to how we train and what we put on our bodies. For instance, how fast could Matt Biondi swum a 50 or 100 if he had access to the wealth of information we have now just 15 years later in regards to training, nutrition and suits.
Could he possibly 20 47 low in the 100 if he were in his 20's/early 30's right now?
And to my point, imagine the 50 free. How fast is "impossible"? We just say Bousquet take 1/4 second of the 50 free WR. What's the limit? You'd think at some point someone's going to set a WR that will never be broken.
Parents
Former Member
Every human is unique and there's no way to prove that even exist physical size limit so you can prove nothing about absolute time limit for definition .
So It's simply, there's no way to prove that there's a time limit other that it exist and it's greater that 0 just because nothing can move at infinite speed.
400 years ago nodody thought that a day a Man will walk on the moon...
Every human is unique and there's no way to prove that even exist physical size limit so you can prove nothing about absolute time limit for definition .
So It's simply, there's no way to prove that there's a time limit other that it exist and it's greater that 0 just because nothing can move at infinite speed.
400 years ago nodody thought that a day a Man will walk on the moon...