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In general, it's easier to be negative. It's easier for us at Cracked, because it's easier to write jokes about terrible things than nice things. It's easier for us as a generation, because to admit that the world isn't that bad right now would be to admit that we have it easier than our grandparents did and that the world thus has the right to expect more from us. But as much as we like to joke about the sorry state of the world, the facts really don't back us up.
Cro-Magnon man, who lived in Europe 20,000 to 30,000 years ago, had the biggest brains of any human species. In comparison, today's human brain is about 10 percent smaller. It's a chunk of brain matter "roughly equivalent to a tennis ball in size," McAuliffe says.
The experts aren't sure about the implications of this evolutionary trend. Some think it might be a dumbing-down process. One cognitive scientist, David Geary, argues that as human society grows increasingly complex, individuals don't need to be as intelligent in order to survive and reproduce.
But not all researchers are so pessimistic. Brian Hare, an anthropologist at the Duke University Institute for Brain Sciences, thinks the decrease in brain size is actually an evolutionary advantage.
Originally posted by Illusionsaregrander
reply to post by Rockdisjoint
Humans might actually be getting dumber though.
www.npr.org...
Cro-Magnon man, who lived in Europe 20,000 to 30,000 years ago, had the biggest brains of any human species. In comparison, today's human brain is about 10 percent smaller. It's a chunk of brain matter "roughly equivalent to a tennis ball in size," McAuliffe says.
The experts aren't sure about the implications of this evolutionary trend. Some think it might be a dumbing-down process. One cognitive scientist, David Geary, argues that as human society grows increasingly complex, individuals don't need to be as intelligent in order to survive and reproduce.
But not all researchers are so pessimistic. Brian Hare, an anthropologist at the Duke University Institute for Brain Sciences, thinks the decrease in brain size is actually an evolutionary advantage.
Brian size actually is correlated with IQ.
Its interesting stuff, particularly if you believe in things like the "Illuminati." Human beings are exhibiting signs of "domestication." If we are exhibiting signs of domestication, and becoming so much more passive and tame, who is it that is domesticating us? It certainly begs the question of whether or not wolves are tending the flock.
First of all, you have the fact that the crap from previous eras gets forgotten, leaving only the great stuff behind. Those songs on classic rock stations are obviously cherry-picked as the best and most indicative of an entire era; it's not a random sampling of all the music available at the time.
Originally posted by Pastafarian
Originally posted by Illusionsaregrander
reply to post by Rockdisjoint
Humans might actually be getting dumber though.
www.npr.org...
Cro-Magnon man, who lived in Europe 20,000 to 30,000 years ago, had the biggest brains of any human species. In comparison, today's human brain is about 10 percent smaller. It's a chunk of brain matter "roughly equivalent to a tennis ball in size," McAuliffe says.
The experts aren't sure about the implications of this evolutionary trend. Some think it might be a dumbing-down process. One cognitive scientist, David Geary, argues that as human society grows increasingly complex, individuals don't need to be as intelligent in order to survive and reproduce.
But not all researchers are so pessimistic. Brian Hare, an anthropologist at the Duke University Institute for Brain Sciences, thinks the decrease in brain size is actually an evolutionary advantage.
Brian size actually is correlated with IQ.
Its interesting stuff, particularly if you believe in things like the "Illuminati." Human beings are exhibiting signs of "domestication." If we are exhibiting signs of domestication, and becoming so much more passive and tame, who is it that is domesticating us? It certainly begs the question of whether or not wolves are tending the flock.
Brian size???
Anyway, wasn't Einsteins brain a little smaller than average?
Albert Einstein’s brain in picture C, you can see where the two different sulci are fused. this is why neuroscientists think that einstein was so good at math and physics because the fusion allowed more communication between the two brain areas that involves thinking about abstract mathematical and physics things.