Relish in Chaos said:
Spot1990 said:
Relish in Chaos said:
That?s déjà vu, not precognition. Contrary to popular belief, they?re not actually the same thing. Look it up.
However, I don't want to sound like a spiritualist loony or anything, but it wouldn't be at all wrong to theorize that humans do have some kind of subconscious precognitive ability, like tapping into more of their brain power or something.
... More of their brain power? You don't actually believe that "we only use 10% of our brain" thing do you?
N...nooooooo...
I always accepted it as scientific fact. No-one ever told me otherwise. What percentage of our brain power
do we use, or are we just using all of it? Or is it just a myth that anthropocentric scientists pushed to fuel their bias that we're all special (not in the retard way) people with potential beyond our current capacity or whatever?
I have a B.S. in psychology, with an unofficial emphasis in biology, so I may be able to help here. We generally use only a certain percentage of our brains *at any given time*, but all of the brain gets used throughout your life. Different parts of the brain do different things, some of them contradictory to each other, so you don't want all your neurons firing at once; if they did, you'd likely die, or at least have some extraordinary hallucinations and seizures. How much of your brain is in use depends on, well, how much of it you happen to be using at the time.
Think of your brain as a console on the bridge of a starship. There's a ton of things that console *could* be doing, but it's generally only doing a few at any given time. If it was doing literally everything it could do -- such as trying to turn the ship both port and starboard at the same time -- it would be counterproductive or even dangerous.
The more knowledge and ability you have in a specific area, the more neurons you brain devotes to that area. That's where we get the whole story about Einstein using more of his brain than we do; it's true when he works in his chosen field, but at no other time. He's only using more brain because he's devoted more neurons to the subject, which is something any of us could do.
Of course, I only have an undergraduate education on the matter, and it's been a few years since I studied all of this; I would not call myself an expert. But overall I would say that the "we only use 10% of our brain" concept is a myth. I hope this post was helpful to you.