this post was submitted on 27 Aug 2022
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This isn’t cultural as much as material.
The saw example is most glaring. Plenty of “””eastern””” saws cut on a push, we just only have familiarity with Japanese joinery tools because that’s the type of handmade woodworking that survived the fascist era and ww2.
So it’s not that there’s a cultural difference, but a difference in our perception. There’s also a real difference in the development of the industry that created and used those tools in those places. (Japanese saws that cut on the pull are made of thinner steel and so cut on the pull out of necessity as opposed to for some other reason. As for why they are thin, look to the relative value of often imported steel at the times those tools were made to find out why!)