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#16 | |
a real smartass
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Kirkland, WA
Posts: 1,121
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Quote:
I remember thinking about the ten-percent myth a year ago, trying-and-failing to convince people that it was not true. They often cited ESP as evidence that it was true. I believe that the myth came from a publication a hundred or so years ago which demonstrated what different parts of the brain did (possibly those pictures where they have the brain divided into different functions; now used to depict a large section of the brain devoted to CHOCOLATE or something). At that time, they thought that they knew what 10% of the brain did. The myth comes from misinterpretation of the research. "People believe what they want to believe or are afraid to believe." -- Moyra Caldecott, in Guardians of the Tall Stones (I read and re-read this book continuously for about a month and a half when I was in the fifth grade.) Some other popular myths that I know of: the idea that people have a innate (circadian?) clock which operates on a twenty-eight to thirty-six hour schedule. What was really odd was that, during the early years of high school, myself and ALL of my friends knew and believed this myth, and we had all known of it before we met each other. Two years later, one of them decided that he was going to live in his room during the summer, writes programs for his TI, and operate on a thirty-six hour schedule. Possibly because I had had a falling out with him that day over religious issues*, I thought "wait a minute! That doesn't make sense! We ought to have evolved to have a twenty-four hour schedule", and I tried to search for information on it. However, it seemed like Google had never even heard of the theory, until I managed to find an article about a study which had refuted the thirty-six hour schedule myth. The study which the myth was based on had had several people living in rooms with only artificial lighting. People could turn the lights on or off whenever they wished, and because our body's schedule is adjusted by a light sensor**, their schedules were mangled and became elongated. A more recent study had found that the body releases serotonin and melanonin at regular intervals, which causes us to make up and go to sleep on a shedule that corresponds exactly to the length of the Terran day. Another myth is the idea that the Great Wall of China is the only man-made structure that can be seen from space ('by the naked eye'). This is not only wrong, it also originates from a fantastic-places story written by somebody in the 1930s who had never been to China. According to one of my cooler teachers, the only man-made structure which can be seen from space is New York's landfill in New Jersey. There is also the "morphic resonance", collective-conciousness idea popular among New Age-y folks. *He tried to convince me that biology supported Creationism: I happened to have been familiar with his example, and knew that it was not only fifty years old and long since refuted, but he had also horribly misinterpreted it [he had a habit of talking a lot***, and he was very convincing unless you knew more than he did, in which case he was usually wrong]). *** To mock him, we had awarded him a shirt reading "Help! I'm talking and I can't shut up!"; which he actually liked and wore regularly for years. ** will not be posted here yet. |
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