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  1.     
    #11
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    Quote Originally Posted by Beeblebrox.420
    Well, no. That was more or less the opposite of what you said.
    That's one thing the internet ISN'T good for.....conducting sarcasm.

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  3.     
    #12
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    idiots...

  4.     
    #13
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    I've always wondered what it would be like if I was the first human that used his/her entire brain. Einstein said we'd be pure energy, never dying; only transforming.

  5.     
    #14
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    That "we use only 10% of our brains" deal is utter rubbish. We use nearly all our brains all the time. Every segment of a healthy human brain is used at least once during a typical day, and most are in use constantly. Think about it: it takes a considerable amount of energy to grow brain cells. Why would an organsim expend so much energy to grow brain structures which are never or rarely used?

  6.     
    #15
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    The "we only use 10% of our brains" statement is a bit misleading - a broad statement used to cover the general principal of normal brain function. What it really means is that our brains filter out so much information received from the outside world that only about 10% of it is actually utilized as final sensory input. It's a basic function of sobriety; without it, you would probably go insane (see below).

    These filters can be bypassed with the help of psychotropic drugs, or removed with the help of knowledge.

    If you were to compare an MRI of a normal sober person to an MRI of that same person on LSD, you'd see that in the first MRI, only about 10-20% of the brain is mapped with activity; the second would show the majority of the brain mapped with activity. This is because LSD's primary function is to open previously-unopened channels in the brain and remove many filters imposed by normal brain function (a normal dose of LSD is almost COMPLETELY metabolized within 30 minutes, so it's not the drug's agonism itself that makes you trip for 8 hours, but the previously unexplored pathways it opens). LSD is psychomimitec, and when an MRI of a person under the influence of LSD is compared to that of a mentally ill patient, little difference can be noted.

    So basically, if we "used all of our brains", we would become a race of insane, or at least would appear so to any people left still "only using 10% of their brains".


    Addressing the original question, read up on Plato's theory of the divided line of knowledge. It's an interesting topic that pretty much covers your thoughts on this matter.

  7.     
    #16
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    Quote Originally Posted by kr1Nx01
    The "we only use 10% of our brains" statement is a bit misleading - a broad statement used to cover the general principal of normal brain function. What it really means is that our brains filter out so much information received from the outside world that only about 10% of it is actually utilized as final sensory input. It's a basic function of sobriety; without it, you would probably go insane (see below).

    These filters can be bypassed with the help of psychotropic drugs, or removed with the help of knowledge.

    If you were to compare an MRI of a normal sober person to an MRI of that same person on LSD, you'd see that in the first MRI, only about 10-20% of the brain is mapped with activity; the second would show the majority of the brain mapped with activity. This is because LSD's primary function is to open previously-unopened channels in the brain and remove many filters imposed by normal brain function (a normal dose of LSD is almost COMPLETELY metabolized within 30 minutes, so it's not the drug's agonism itself that makes you trip for 8 hours, but the previously unexplored pathways it opens). LSD is psychomimitec, and when an MRI of a person under the influence of LSD is compared to that of a mentally ill patient, little difference can be noted.

    So basically, if we "used all of our brains", we would become a race of insane, or at least would appear so to any people left still "only using 10% of their brains".


    Addressing the original question, read up on Plato's theory of the divided line of knowledge. It's an interesting topic that pretty much covers your thoughts on this matter.
    Severing the Corpus Callosum (The little piece of tissue that connects both hemispheres of your brain) is sometimes done to reduce the number of seizures with people that have epilepsy. The seizures occur because of too much activity going back and forth between your left and right sides of your brain. Of course there would be adverse effects of someone's brain suddenly turning into a supernova of electric activity. I'm talking about people evolving physiologically to handle that type of brain power...to clear up what I mentioned earlier.

  8.     
    #17
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    Quote Originally Posted by kr1Nx01
    LSD is psychomimitec, and when an MRI of a person under the influence of LSD is compared to that of a mentally ill patient, little difference can be noted.
    Care to narrow that field down a bit? There are hundreds of distinct mental illnesses which manifest uniquely identifiable patterns on an MRI scan. Which one of these does LSD ostensibly mimic?

  9.     
    #18
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    schitzophrenia.

  10.     
    #19
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    then how do you explain parrots...... who talk.

  11.     
    #20
    Senior Member

    deep thoughts...

    Quote Originally Posted by naturalmystic
    then how do you explain parrots...... who talk.
    Well, they don't talk, they mimic. They don't underestand the underlying meaning of what they are saying, although they can learn to associate words and phrases with people, things and events. They don't have the brain structures necessary to parse complex language.

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