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VoidHawk
reply to post by Picollo30
Drop the word ALIEN and replace it with GOVERNMENT and I'll 100% agree with you.
Golantrevize
We use all of our brain. We just don't use all of it at the same time since our brain is seperated into different parts highly specialized to do different tasks. If im sneezing, I do not need 100% of my brain to do so. Same if im eating or running.
Abduction to stop certain changes in our DNA would be useless. No abduction has ever been proven to start with, and even if it was true, one person getting their DNA back on track would have zero repercussion on the human genome since we are about 7 billion.
Picollo30
VoidHawk
reply to post by Picollo30
Drop the word ALIEN and replace it with GOVERNMENT and I'll 100% agree with you.
hawk do you think abductions are man made? seriously?
the objective being? i just cant cope with the idea of humans doing that to other humans. we humans are not like that even though we are not perfect.
Golantrevize
reply to post by Picollo30
I have never seen a human being do the things you are mentioning.
Picollo30
I was wondering if these abductions by aliens are happening because they know the potential we humans have to overcome almost anything, we are very resilient, and they know that we only use a small percentage of our brain (which i dont think it's a myth) and want to keep it that way.
It's like they have us on a leash or a puppet string, they need to be in control, otherwise we will prevail.
Human brain organization is built upon a more ancient adaptation, the large brain of simian primates: on average, monkeys and apes have brains twice as large as expected for mammals of their size, principally as a result of neocortical enlargement. Testing the adaptive benefit of this evolutionary specialization depends on finding an association between brain size and function in primates.
Deceitful behavior has a long and storied history in the evolution of social life, and the more sophisticated the animal, it seems, the more commonplace the con games, the more cunning their contours.
In a comparative survey of primate behavior, Richard Byrne and Nadia Corp of the University of St. Andrews in Scotland found a direct relationship between sneakiness and brain size.