Fellowes Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 I have a question regarding our bodies and their longevity. You hear about how some scientists from God-knows-where that say that our brains are capable of memorizing three encylopedia sets, A-Z, something like 7 languages, etc, etc. Now I was wondering, if our brains or minds have so much potential then why aren't our bodies evolved enough to be able to not deteriorate so fast so as to let us reach our full potential mentally. We're only using something like 3 percent of our brain power. Why can't our bodies last longer to let us use the full power of our minds? Anyways just a thought....
Fellowes Posted November 19, 2004 Author Posted November 19, 2004 I have a question regarding our bodies and their longevity. You hear about how some scientists from God-knows-where that say that our brains are capable of memorizing three encylopedia sets, A-Z, something like 7 languages, etc, etc. Now I was wondering, if our brains or minds have so much potential then why aren't our bodies evolved enough to be able to not deteriorate so fast so as to let us reach our full potential mentally. We're only using something like 3 percent of our brain power. Why can't our bodies last longer to let us use the full power of our minds? Anyways just a thought....
Lance Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 We're only using something like 3 percent of our brain power. That's a myth.
Lance Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 We're only using something like 3 percent of our brain power. That's a myth.
gene Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 The brain doesn't control our genetic blueprint. We were made to live and to die. But, interesting one though!!! about 3 percent of our brain power? that's a first time. myth? so how many % do we use? btw, talking about braincells, do they die all the time?
gene Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 The brain doesn't control our genetic blueprint. We were made to live and to die. But, interesting one though!!! about 3 percent of our brain power? that's a first time. myth? so how many % do we use? btw, talking about braincells, do they die all the time?
Xandrabeast Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 I do believe that the current idea of brain use is that we do indeed use all of it, just not all of it at once. Also, because of current technological and ethical limitations, we cannot actually measure how much of the brain ever does get used. Also, I read an article (can't remember where at the moment) about how death is an evolutionary advantage for a species that reproduces sexually (as opposed to asexually) because it promotes genetic diversity and therefore better ability for the species to survive.
Xandrabeast Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 I do believe that the current idea of brain use is that we do indeed use all of it, just not all of it at once. Also, because of current technological and ethical limitations, we cannot actually measure how much of the brain ever does get used. Also, I read an article (can't remember where at the moment) about how death is an evolutionary advantage for a species that reproduces sexually (as opposed to asexually) because it promotes genetic diversity and therefore better ability for the species to survive.
Mokele Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 ::Looks at most of humanity:: We use 3% of our brains? That seems a bit high for most people....
Mokele Posted November 19, 2004 Posted November 19, 2004 ::Looks at most of humanity:: We use 3% of our brains? That seems a bit high for most people....
Fellowes Posted November 21, 2004 Author Posted November 21, 2004 lol mokele, i dont know about the 3% part, that was just to get my point through, although xandrabeast has a point, i guess this kind of answers my question..
Fellowes Posted November 21, 2004 Author Posted November 21, 2004 lol mokele, i dont know about the 3% part, that was just to get my point through, although xandrabeast has a point, i guess this kind of answers my question..
birdo118 Posted December 1, 2004 Posted December 1, 2004 evolution is not determined by brain capacity. that is just a "perk" of humans' evolutionary state. as humans continue to evolve, though, the logevity problem may be bypassed by quicker processing capabilities. i agree with xandrabeast, though, about the need for death in a sexually reproducing species. like xandrabeast said, evolution is also based on the needs of the species, not the individual....and it is easy to say that not all humans have that amazing brain capacity:confused:....but thats another story....
Fellowes Posted December 1, 2004 Author Posted December 1, 2004 I know we all need to die, but just not soo soon...
Phi for All Posted December 7, 2004 Posted December 7, 2004 ::Looks at most of humanity:: We use 3% of our brains? That seems a bit high for most people.... Think of how dumb the average person is. Got it? OK, now think about the fact that half the entire population is dumber than that! *shudder* I think the key you're looking for Fellowes is to minimize the poisons you let into your body, stay in good shape and don't let your mind atrophy by letting others do your thinking for you. As Xandrabeast said, we use our whole brain, just not all at once. It's up to you to use the right parts.
Skye Posted December 7, 2004 Posted December 7, 2004 You know how we say a dog year is seven human years? Makes it seem nicer when your dog dies at nine, you can say he was 63 in human years. Well I figure that we would seem so much older if we started converted our ages into say, oak years, and every human year is seven oak years. 'It's not so bad, in human years he may have died at 39, but in oak years that's 273!'
Mr.trooper Posted December 7, 2004 Posted December 7, 2004 "Now I was wondering, if our brains or minds have so much potential then why aren't our bodies evolved enough to be able to not deteriorate so fast so as to let us reach our full potential mentally" --Perhaps the problem is not one of phisical "evolution"?
TimeTraveler Posted December 7, 2004 Posted December 7, 2004 You know how we say a dog year is seven human years? Makes it seem nicer when your dog dies at nine, you can say he was 63 in human years. Well I figure that we would seem so much older if we started converted our ages into say, oak years, and every human year is seven oak years. 'It's not so bad, in human years he may have died at 39, but in oak years that's 273!' Lol good idea!
JaKiri Posted December 8, 2004 Posted December 8, 2004 You know how we say a dog year is seven human years? Makes it seem nicer when your dog dies at nine' date=' you can say he was 63 in human years. Well I figure that we would seem so much older if we started converted our ages into say, oak years, and every human year is seven oak years. 'It's not so bad, in human years he may have died at 39, but in oak years that's 273!'[/quote'] How many oak trees do you know that die naturally after 10 years?
YT2095 Posted December 8, 2004 Posted December 8, 2004 the OP still makes an interesting point, alittle over worded perhaps but good. if we have the capacity to learn until our bodies fail us, and still potentialy have room for much more in the old gray matter, it does seem a little one sided!
Gilded Posted December 8, 2004 Posted December 8, 2004 "We use 3% of our brains? That seems a bit high for most people...." I'm quite sure there's a plot that involves giving government jobs to people with the least brain potential. "How many oak trees do you know that die naturally after 10 years?" Plant an oak tree in Finland and you'll be having a dead oak in no time.
YT2095 Posted December 8, 2004 Posted December 8, 2004 Plant an oak tree in Finland and you'll be having a dead oak in no time. do that with your Pine Tables then!, I know how much you hate them, and no explosives required
Gilded Posted December 8, 2004 Posted December 8, 2004 You've got to be kidding me. Pine tables are no ordinary tables, nor are pine ordinary trees! They're the manifestation of Lucifer himself! And you can't possibly imagine killing a pine table even with the fierce weather and foul landscape of Finland. It requires explosives. Explosives, I say! (Or acids, perhaps a gigantic laser would be sufficient too)
Fellowes Posted December 12, 2004 Author Posted December 12, 2004 i thought this thread would die quick but it still seems like an interesting social point
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