Efficiency principle
Lessons from Eagle
Preserve energy for decisive moves.

Core lesson
Use the energy already available in the environment. Systems that borrow momentum from context outperform systems that brute-force everything themselves.
Biological basis
Extreme visual acuity, broad wings tuned for soaring, and grip strength concentrated in the talons make eagles efficient aerial reconnaissance and strike hardware. Eagles connect height, heat, and prey detection across open landscapes. They pressure medium-sized prey, exploit thermals as free transport, and turn large territories into readable operating surfaces.
Best use cases
Where this lesson tends to be most useful in practice.
Explore related indexes
Related lessons
Other animals connected to the Efficiency principle.
Burrowing Parrot
Preserve energy for decisive moves.
A species can solve home-building in ways its relatives never try.
Read lessonCoati
Preserve energy for decisive moves.
A good sensing tool becomes more useful when many bodies can search at once.
Read lessonCrab
Preserve energy for decisive moves.
You do not always need elegant forward speed. In messy environments, armor, leverage, and the ability to move through narrow edges can be the real advantage.
Read lesson