A
A window to the soul
Guest
Prolly just need to cut down on cell phone usage.
It just means the human brain is getting more efficient, not 'dumber'.
Exactly, Einstein's brain was against common believes smaller than the median value. One explanation why he was so smart is that the neurons in his brain was bundled together tighter than the average Joe's.
There is a parallel for this, actually. Did you know that domestic dogs have brains that are around 10% smaller than wolves, relative to body mass?
We are using less than 10% of our brains anyway.
that has been proved wrong like 10 years ago already![]()
Lolz... really? I didn't know
So does it mean me use slightly more than 10% or around 50%?
:workout:
You use 100% of your brain 100% of the time, but much of the information is ignored as useless.
Exactly, Einstein's brain was against common believes smaller than the median value. One explanation why he was so smart is that the neurons in his brain was bundled together tighter than the average Joe's.
brain size doesent make real difference, the thing that makes the difference is how large that outer layer is when you straighten all the wrinkles(sorry i dont know what the fancy words are in english).
Circuits and CPUs have been getting smaller, more efficient, and more powerful since their inception. I see the human brain as developing in a similar fashion.
Agreed.
I wonder what will happen when we eventually combine the two. What size will be necessary then?
Circuits and CPUs have been getting smaller, more efficient, and more powerful since their inception. I see the human brain as developing in a similar fashion.
Artificial intelligence will exceed human intelligence in the near future, then the size of our inferior brains will be moot.
Okay, I need to go into Ti+Ne mode for a sec and call you out on why this doesn't make any sense at all.
It is not logically consistent to think that because computer chips are becoming smaller due to technological advances that this would mean that a human brain could possibly undergo an even remotely similar process like this inanimate machinery. The two are so dramatically unrelated; there's just absolutely no basis for this type of thinking.
That being said, I think it's quite possible that OP's article has some sense behind it. Think about it; growth almost always occurs out of NECESSITY. The NECESSITY to learn and understand things is becoming weaker every day,
as everything in our lives is being made simpler and requiring less work and thinking. There's an overwhelming amount of information at our fingertips; you barely have to work for it at all.
The Age of Technology has given rise to general disorders such as ADD that everyone alive claims to suffer from, and this attack of information from all sides is having an effect opposite to what one might expect: it is resulting in people learning and retaining LESS. The drive, the desire, the NECESSITY to learn and understand are all weaker than they were in olden days.
Doesn't the brain create neural connections and strengthen pathways when you stimulate it? Isn't it possible that the amount of neural connections you make has a relation to how large your brain is relative to your size or relative to your brain's size potential? Isn't it also possible, then, nay - even probable, that understimulation of the brain results in reduced neural connections, which results in smaller, less powerful brains?
I think it's a definite possibility that our brains are shrinking due to under-stimulation, though I'd like to see the research behind the study in OP's post.
He didn't say that because CPU's have been getting smaller, that the brain is following in that path. No, he simply stated that the relationship between the evolution of the human brain and the development of the CPU have striking similarities.
No, the necessity to learn has not devolved. We still live in a competitive and evolved society... Learning is most certainly not a thing of the past and the necessity to learn has only gotten stronger. Take a look at modern education, it's a great and in-depth thing that spans many subjects from; philosophy, to biology, to maths, to physics. In the past, these acedmic achievements are virtually nonexistent - that is, school was not as broad and taxing, or did not exist at all, nor was it as refined. I sincerely doubt you would have found children learning algebra 2 in the year 4000 B.C.
Everything has grown more complex as it has gotten simpler and more accessible.
I'd like to see the proofs that the brain is shrinking due to lack of stimulation as well.