With reference to the picture below, how is it that when there is a lower activation energy (due to the alternate reaction pathway provided by the catalyst) that the catalyst will increase the forward and reverse reactions exactly the same amount.
It only makes intuitive sense that when the $Ea$ is lowered, the forward reaction increases more than the reverse reaction because the decrease was an absolute amount (that is, the same decrease for both forward and reverse) and thus proportionately, the forward $Ea$ has been reduced far more than the reverse $Ea$. So why should the reverse reaction instantly be raised such that it is still equal to the forward reaction (if from equilibrium)?
