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disappoint

Lifer
Dec 7, 2009
10,132
382
126
Can a being living in 2-space comprehend 3-space? Can a being living in 3-space comprehend 4-space?

Depends on the being. I for one have no problem understanding 4 dimensional space. I'm certain I am not alone in it's understanding.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,905
31,435
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I wonder if flies evolve. We have evidence that humans do. What about flies? But what difference would it make? Even if flies did evolve, would their evolution be as interesting, or more to the point, as capable as human evolution?

of course flies evolve. why wouldn't they? All life is dependent on the same law of evolution.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,905
31,435
146
Our brains evolved here on earth to allow us to cope with things on earth. There's no reason to assume that our brain will be able to cope with everything else in the universe. I'm sure we can understand much of it, but there is no guarantee of anything.

exactly. which, to me, means there is no reason to assume we can't eventually cope with everything extra-terrestrial, and that there is likewise no guarantee of the negative argument happening.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,905
31,435
146
Seems like that could be true if a single signal in the brain was an entire thought. If it takes a million signals in the brain to make you decide to go to the bathroom before you wet yourself, then the signal to thought ratio may not support true understanding of very much at all. The differences in complexity don't save us if the process of thinking is sufficiently inefficient in utilizing that complexity.

I don't think you appreciate the utter complexity of such a process--taking a piss--and the cluster of signals, organs, action potentials and secretions, working in concert, that make this happen. It's not unlike the amount of forces, working in harmony--though mostly dependent on "luck" (where they happen to be in an expanding universe-- that keep the planets in orbit where they are, or how stars form and die.

bear in mind, too, that once that process is finished--the trip to the toilet--that allocated activity can be used for other purposes. One isn't constantly taking a piss, or let's hope not, anyway.

Make no mistake--the human brain is, by far, the most complex structure in the known universe, and likely our least-understood frontier.

Check out some of Oliver Sack's stuff.