“What Is A Fact About The Human Body That Not Many People Know About?” (50 Answers)
The human body is everything that makes up, well, us. However, there are plenty of fascinating things we don't know about it, or rather, ourselves.
Once you look closer, dive under the surface of the skin, explore the inner workings of the biological systems that ensure our everyday life, you just can't help but admire the marvel that you really are.
To learn more about our bits and pieces, Redditor u/Zenssei made a post on r/AskReddit, asking other platform users to share some facts about the human body that not many people know about. Their call to action was immediately answered.
u/Zenssei said the idea for this post came to them pretty naturally. "I was just watching TV, thinking of [something] I could post on r/AskReddit," they told Bored Panda.
"I have learned quite a bit from the comments such as there is a right and a wrong way to swallow, or that about 20% of people have a bone ridge on the roof of the mouth... It was fun reading through the replies."
As of this article, the post already has received over 56K upvotes and 23K comments, and has become one of the coolest online trivia archives out there!
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Your brain regulates how strong your muscles are. If your leg muscles were to contract at full strength, they would snap your femur.
Its why people in emergencies on adrenaline can lift cars off children. Your body is capable of great strength, but it could also severely damage you, so your brain keeps you a weak, soft bag of jelly.
When doing surgery where the doctors have to take out some organs, when placing them back, they don't have to be put back In the exact position there meant to be, your body kind of just, moves the organs into the correct position after the surgery
There are many ways we could look at the human body. "On an evolutionary scale, sometimes we are similar to animals, and sometimes we're not," general practitioner, medical researcher, and founder of PrimeHealth Clinical Research, Iris Gorfinkel, M.D., told Bored Panda. "We're symmetric, [our] basic body structure is similar; we have what's called homologous bone structure. In other words, you can find exact similarities between humans and other animals and how our bones are put together."
"Even our muscles and heart and vascular systems are similar. Our lungs are often similar too. [As well as] the fact that there's a long tube from the moment food enters our mouth to the point at which it goes out of our rectum," Gorfinkel explained. "Their breathing is similar to ours neurologically. Urologically (how urine is formed), we're also quite similar. In all of these aspects, we are very similar to animals."
People who live in "extreme" conditions for generations adapt in extreme ways. For example people that live in high elevations often have larger lungs and different blood makeup. Or my favorite is the Bajau people that live on the water and spend a lot of their time diving, their spleens have become 50% larger in order to store more blood.
You hate the sound of your recorded voice because it's missing the low frequency you're used to hearing.
When you talk, you hear your voice as it goes to the air and back to you ear. It also goes through your skull to your ear, and this bone conduction mechanism transmits the low frequencies better than air does.
Your recorded voice only has the air transmitted sound. That causes the dissonance between what you think your voice sounds like, and what it really does. It's also why your voice will (almost) always be higher pitch than you think.
But if we continue to measure ourselves against animals, we inevitably start noticing differences. "Animals communicate across miles of land through subsonic sound, that's true. But human beings, on the other hand, have very complex language systems," Gorfinkel said. "We have introspection—that's another critical difference, [as well as] our creativity and emotions, like joy and sorrow and grief—although grief has been described in some animals, including elephants, wolves, and sea lions. But the biggest difference that makes us humans a complete and utter separate category within the animal kingdom, is our ability to have an imagination, to use language in such a complex way, and to hold fictions in our mind."
The comparison that Gorfinkel thought of on the spot illustrates her point on a meta-level. "Let's just say the lion is the guardian spirit of our tribe. He still could never convince a monkey to give him a banana by promising the little guy, say, an unlimited supply of bananas in monkey heaven. So our ability to create and believe in collected fiction, that's what makes human beings really different."
Humans have, on average, just as many hairs on their body as chimpanzees, human hair is just a lot shorter and finer.
Some parts of our body, however, remain unknown even to science. Take the human brain for example. It has approximately 86 billion neurons, woven together by an estimated 100 trillion connections, or synapses. So untangling such a delicate network is a daunting task—we don't know the details of how those cells work, let alone how they come together to make up our sensory systems, our behavior, our consciousness.
"You would think it would be easy [to study the brain], it weighs only three pounds, and three-quarters of it is water and 60% of it is fatty tissue. And you'd also think it's easy because the brain can't feel pain. You know, surgery could be done on it, allowing for easy experimentation, as inhumane as it sounds. But there are several things that make it extremely difficult," Gorfinkel said.
"[Our billions of neurons], connected by trillions upon trillions of synapses in a barrel, is a veritable neuronal forest, and the information is moving at all different speeds, some up to, I think, 250 miles an hour. So even with things like functional MRI [we don't get close to] the nitty-gritty of understanding the very fine neuronal connections that are happening, that really define memory, that define all the complexity that I was just describing: language, reason, creativity, and emotions."
Your eyes have a separate immune system from the rest of your body and in a lot of occasions if your body's immune system finds your eyes, they will assume they are a foreign body and blind you.
Humans are bioluminescent and glow in the dark, but the light that we emit is 1,000 times weaker than our human eyes are able to pick up.
Christof Koch, Ph.D., Chief Scientist and President of the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and his colleagues study the brain on a large scale. But the more they look at many or most cells in the brain rather than just a few, the more they realize that even the parts of neuroscience they thought the field had nailed down are more complicated than anyone had realized.
"There may not be any simple path to understanding complex systems shaped by natural selection,” Koch thinks. "Evolution doesn't care about elegance. The brain doesn't care if you understand it."
The reason it's so easy to break your collar bone is because its designed to break.
The way it was explained to me is that its like a circuit breaker. It breaks there to stop the shock of impact getting to your spine
I'll one-up you - broke mine when I was four at the day care. Fell over the edge of a slide while looking down at a fellow prisoner. Big-ole-head took me right on over!
Load More Replies...Interesting fact: Sometimes doctors/nurses will intentionally break the collar bone of a baby passing through the birth cannel in order to help get the shoulders out. Otherwise it could create a hardship on the child and mother. (It depends on how the baby presents during birth. It doesn't happen often but it is a tool they use.)
My friend's baby had her collarbone broken at birth. You had to be very careful with her (even more careful!!) in the beginning. Especially with picking her up (from her crib etc.). Luckily babies bones heal much faster than our adult bones!
Load More Replies...Idk. I assume it's easier to evolve a crumple zone than a shock absorber.
Load More Replies...side note: dogs don't have collar bones and the clavicle is what allows us humans to be able to swing our arms 360 degrees
Maybe you can swing your arms 360, but after 5 rotor cuff repairs and full tears on both side again, arms only go to right below shoulder height, unless I am drugged
Load More Replies...Didn't ever break or even see my collar bone - have built an own crumple zone of fat around it to protect it. 😁
Broke mine at age 40 tripping over my overly anxious dog. I was moving, it was the last day in the old house, and dog knew something big was up since the house had become empty and I was constantly on the move. He stuck closely to my heels all afternoon until I did a sudden change of direction and fell over him. Big fun to break a collarbone on moving day.
Fun fact: you can't "armor" you collar bone by working out. So if you, as a martial artist who can handle a single brick break, are being attacked by a huge monster muscle Mook, just snap the collar bone.
You say that as though it were an entirely unsupported structure that is structurally liable to fracturing along a fine line and propped up in a way so as to promote such a fracture, as a brick is in the confidence building exercise - not a demonstration of ability but a method of overcoming certain mental obstacles - and not actually somewhat structurally resistant to flex, and that landing that blow would simply happen with ease and without opposition, and that you actually know what you are talking about as opposed to blowing your own fantastical horn. "Just" snap the collar bone of a maniac conditioned towards strength and aggression who intends you harm... Do this often, or just LARP with peers in a safe, padded environment with strict precautions in place? While it is true that that particular bone is one of the easiest to break and that breaking it might possibly cause someone maybe some hesitancy to continue their assault, anyone who is filling other peoples' heads with the nonsense idea that it is a simple thing to do in a live situation and that it even will necessarily end a conflict is, themselves, a fantasy dwelling f*****t responsible only for the design of those persons' error.
Load More Replies...Also, when you break your pelvis, it typically breaks in two places... Kind of like when you break a pretzel in half. I know from experience, unfortunately. Doctor, who was excellent and found the break unlike the emergency room staff, told me: "You broke your ass bone." Car wreck.
And then you've got the competitive cyclists who fall off their bikes, break their collar bones, then get back on their bikes and keep riding. Oof.
As cool as this seems it isn't entirely accurate. The collar bone serves several functions, like nine muscles are attached to it, and arguably most importantly, it allows for free arm movement that doesn't interfere with the thorax. While it's true that it does absorb impact shock, which helps protect the spine, the collar bone is not a circuit breaker. It'd be more accurate to compare it to the engine compartment of a car, which mainly serves to store the engine, but will crumple in an accident to deaccelerate the car. But the truth is, the collar bone wasn't designed for anything. It just happened to help organisms survive and spread so they outlived the same organisms without it. Vertebrates with collar bones were more agile (and had less spine injuries) so they generally survived more situations than those without it.
My dumb-ass rolled down from a bunk bed and broke mine when i was 14.
they broke mine when i was being born, don't know if on purpose but they tried to hide it from my mother lol
That is worrisome that they tried to hide it from your mom. Since you have to be extra careful picking your baby up from their crib etc. As I read it, your mother did find out? The only luck in it is that babies bones heal much faster than our adult bones! But you still need to be extra careful. Bad practice from those doctors!
Load More Replies...Auto accident cracked my sternum. Hurt like hell. Same thing? Air bag saved me from steering wheel impact.
I didn't know this and yet I used this in a novel (someone hit from behind whose spine survived but clavical broken) without even knowing this.
Couldn't evolution at least have made so that it didn't hurt like a MFer, and heals properly..?
My brother has broken his collar bone multiple times. All people who ride bikes competitively do.
Ok let me explain that collar bone is the only horizontal long bone and from both sides muscle is pulling it into different directions and when u fall on outstretched hand this can cause breakage of collar bone at middle 2/3 and lateral 1/3 which the weakest part as collar bone takes a turn here
Maybe that's why I have had a broken collarbone for 7 months and excepts to take a full year to heal?
i broke my collar bone twice once when i was birthed and once in a dirt bike crash
Oh, stop it. Don't even start that up. This comment-section was a perfectly nice and calm place to gather and discuss. (and BTW yes, I'd categorize Evolution as a functioning Designer, for sure)
Load More Replies...it is a fact, op is j saying that that’s how someone explained the FACT to them 🤦🏻♀️
Load More Replies...But that doesn't mean we should stop learning. On the contrary. There's plenty we can do as individuals and as a society to get a better understanding of ourselves and in turn, those around us. "Emotional education is sadly lacking in schools," Gorfinkel said. "We teach all kinds of useless things. And I hate to say it... They're not useless, but they're not as relative to us as understanding our emotional selves."
The doctor said there is precious little time devoted in schools to understanding emotions, such as anger, humiliation, shame, guilt, and what to do when we face them. Instead, they're often presented as something negative we need to control, as opposed to being contextualized. These emotions can actually help us, show us the path towards what needs to be done next. "They shine a light on how we need to manage our lives better," Gorfinkel explained.
"That is something that has long bothered me. Emotional education is, for the most part, not focused on; we focus on physical education, we focus on [general] education [like] mathematics, physics, chemistry, biochemistry, whatever it is, but a lot of the time, the most critical part that will determine our happiness, and our productivity is completely overlooked."
Because of that, we have to do it ourselves. "Just make the most of picking the low lying fruit," Gorfinkel said. "I'm talking about [things like] sleep or finding the right amount of stress in your life—stress is an interesting thing. Too little stress is actually bad for a person, there's a sweet spot when it comes to stress. And it's kind of a bell curve, right? That if you have too little, there's not enough stimulation. And a person does not approach self-actualization. Even though stress is roundly considered a negative thing, in fact, a little bit, just the right amount is a positive thing. Of course, it can turn into a very negative thing if there's too much. But finding the sweet spot of stress is probably the best tip that I could give."
When you think about it, the Internet is a beautiful thing. One moment, u/Zenssei is chilling in front of their TV, the next, tens of thousands of people are teaching one another about the human body. More of this, please.
Our brains make up, on average, around 2% of our body weight but consume 20% of our caloric intake
Your body will reduce your muscle strength to protect your spine.
Stand on flat ground, hold your arms out in a t-pose, and have a friend push down on your hand while you try to hold it in place. That's your control, how strong you actually are.
Now, remove 1 shoe (or put a book under 1 foot) and repeat with your hips askew so your spine isn't straight. An inch is all it takes.
Your strength will be reduced to the point that your friend can use a single finger to push your hand down.
Alzheimer’s disease isn’t just gradual loss of memory. It physically exists in the brain. It’s a physical substance that attacks the brain. Like, if you were able to open the skull of a person suffering from Alzheimer’s disease to take a look at their brain, you would actually see this sticky, fibrous, grey physical matter overtaking their brain.
You will sooner die from lack of sleep than lack of food.
You can live, depending on your current body fat and health level, for months without food. Estimates are you that you will die for lack of sleep within 2 weeks
The appendix is not a vestigial organ. It actually protects good bacteria in the gut. You can live without it, but it’s not just chillin’ in there
Scars are not made of "permanent" tissue (they're held together by collagen) and are in a constant state of repair. This repair is facilitated by vitamin C (amongst other things). Yes, this means that people with scurvy (from vitamin C deficiency) will see all their old scars reopen into fresh wounds.
Some women can feel the exact moment an egg is released from the ovary during ovulation. Feels like a little pop just on one side. Pretty neat
Humans are one of a few species of mammal that oddly don't produce their own vitamin C due to lack of a certain enzyme. Other mammalian species who exhibit this mutation are those contained in the main primate suborder Haplorhinni (monkeys, apes, tarsiers), as well as bats, capybaras, and guinea pigs.
All other mammals produce vitamin C in the liver.
Fun Fact: Primates can't produce the necessary enzyme L-gulonolactone oxidase because of a mutation that probably happened 58 to 63 million years ago. It is believed that this very negative mutation survied because of the arboreal living conditions with plenty of fruity Vitmain C sources. Anyhow, another proof of common ancestry of the primates as we all have that same mutation in our genes.
You can calm yourself down by splashing cold water on your face to trigger the mammalian diving reflex.
You can grow a new human being faster than most missing toenails can grow back
Hmmm... lost a toenail in an accident, and it was back in about six months vs. nine months for preggers.
If you carry a lot of unprocessed trauma, it can cause psychosomatic autoimmune diseases.
Note that "psychosomatic" does NOT mean "imaginary." It means that emotional trauma is translated into physical trauma.
X-rays of childrens mouths are nightmare fuel. The second set of teeth to replace baby teeth are already grown and lodged in their skulls. So you'll see two rows of teeth and its freaky looking. They don't grow in when the old ones fall out, they are already loaded in the chamber waiting to get launched.
If you say haaah your breath comes out warm,but when you say Woooh it comes out cold.
It's possible to pull a jaw muscle while yawning. I found this out the hard way at work one day.
It's possible to pull all sorts of muscles I only seem to have just so I can injure them
Your body must warm fluids before absorbing them, so drinking ice cold water to hydrate is only burning more energy, and you're not hydrating as quickly.
I have always assumed this, and choose ice water to burn more energy.
That there is NOT 20 lbs of toxic poop in your body at any given time. But apparently a ton of people still believe all sorts of ads about some pill or another being able to flush some imaginary "toxins" out of your body like it's going to magically cure you of 20 years of terrible eating and exercise habits.
Well that's not strictly true - because of the shape of the lower intestine and colon, they never really empty fully. It's very rarely 20lbs worth (you would be extremely ill if that was the case) but there's certainly areas that don't fully clean and bad bacteria can build up there. These drinks and pills work by irritating the gut so badly that everything gets removed, including good bacteria so they are not a healthy option, but they do technically do what they claim.
Apparently not everyone knows that women grow a new organ while pregnant.
In addition to growing a child, they grow the placenta.
Only part of the placenta is grown by the mother. The rest is grown by the baby, as evidenced by father's DNA in it. Fascinating.
39% of people have an extra bone in their knee. 100 years ago only 11% of people had this bone.
Your brain continues to try to revive the body long after the heart has stopped. In some cases 30 hours later there has been found brain activity trying to make repairs to bring the body back. This is used to indicate time of death in murder victims.
How could a brain deprived of oxygen and glucose for so long function on any level?
The proportion of your vision that is actually in sharp focus roughly equates to the size of your thumbnail at arm's length. The rest of it is just your visual cortex filling in the blanks.
In children under 11 (for some reason), cutting off the fingertip from the last knuckle will result in complete regeneration of the finger in 100% of cases, assuming the naibed is intact. There's no explanation for why this happens, why it only happens to children under 11 and why it can't be sequences to fully regenerate / grow organs. It also occurs in many animals, as observed in test rodents.
I learned that in science class in grade 8 and my dad called me a liar. I showed him my science textbook and he threw it away and said it was fake.
You can live "normally" with half your brain. In some severe drug resistant epileptic syndrom in young kids, the only option to stop the seizures is to remove a complete brain hemisphere.
After a while, with proper reeducation and all, the children can go on to have a normal life without cognitive deficit. They will have a limping, blindness from one eye and a very weark arm but can lead a normal life and not end up cognitively impaired.
One of the earliest sign of alzheimer's disease, before the memory loss, could be the loss of the sense of smell. It's also the case with Parkinson disease.
Our brain looks wrinkled because it is actually "folded" inside our skull in order to fit a maximum of surface and thus neurons & cell communications. Some animals like rodents have a completely smooth brain.
Every minute you shed over 30,000 dead skin cells off your body
The reason it feels weird when you or someone touches the inside of your belly button is because the nerves actually go to your spinal cord. These nerves lie at the same level that relay signals to your urethra and bladder. So when you feel like you have to pee when you touch the inside of your belly button, that's why.
I can't take it. That's why I don't wear elastic in my pants. Can't stand it against my belly button!
You can poop out of your mouth if your intestines get backed up enough. It's like vomit, doesn't look like actual poop per se, but it's still disgusting.
Humans have stripes, we just normally can’t see them. They’re called Blaschko’s lines and form along the paths of embryonic cell migration. The stripes are sort of U-shaped down our front, V-shaped on our back, wavy on the head and face and we have basic, simple stripes on our extremities.
Each one of your eyes has a blind spot where the optic nerve exit your eye into your brain. You can't see it because your brain tricks you not to see, it covers the spot with some made up image of what it thinks fits better with the rest of it.
We're the best marathon runners in the animal kingdom and can win a marathon against any animal out there.
AND - that's why we pair with dogs so well, because they're marathon runners also, so we could hunt prey together by wearing it down over time rather than catching it in a sprint or a super quick movement the way many animals do - alligators, bears, birds, snakes, spiders, oh, and obviously... cats ;). That's true!
The average adult has 22 square feet of skin. Perfect size for a nice rug.
Your brain likes stimulation, if it doesn't get any it will make some up, some people are more sucepticle to it then others, the colors you see before you fall asleep are a common mild occurrence, there are several classes of these hallucinations, closed-eye visuals, which are caused by leaving your eyes closed for a long time, hypnagogia, which is caused by the onset of sleep, prisoners cinema, which is caused by looking into a dark place for a long time, ganzfeld effect, which is caused by blocking out all external stimuli, and Charles bonnet syndrome, caused by sight loss.
Most are these are simple phosphenes but some can be whole imagined scenes, or more abstract fractal-like imagery
I get the fractal imagery. It is very pretty. Box that I know it is because my brain is bored, I will try to stimulate it more.
When you have a bowel movement, your heart rhythm shifts temporarily due to a vagus response. The reason Elvis died on the toilet was because his heart was beating 200+ bpm and the quick rhythm change caused a myocardial infarction. People with low heart rates have been known to pass out on the toilet because their bodies can't handle the shift.
It's also why EMTs will absolutely not let you use the bathroom before getting on the ambulance. Especially if the bathroom is a standard 5'x8'.
What do the dimensions of the bathroom have to do with poop-based heart attacks?
It only takes about 15 pounds of force to rip off a human ear
Synovial joint fluid is the most frictionless stuff on the planet (unless they've synthetic'ed something up that recently.)
Is this the stuff people thought others were trying to steal from them?
30% of body waste is excreted via skin
If you faint at the sight of your own blood you may have an oversensitive vasovagal response. The theory is that this developed as a survival mechanism, kind of like an opposum playing dead.
those are interesting. I hate that tomorrow i will have already forgotten all of them
Interesting but many are inaccurate or need more explanation because they are not well written
Load More Replies...Who are these posters and what are their credentials? What are their sources? Some of these "facts" are just BS. Please don't believe everything you read on the internet.
The TLDR version of what i said. Agreed. they're wildly misleading, interpreted very oddly at best, or just weirdly click-baity.
Load More Replies...A few of these are nonsense. I dearly wish a bit more fact checking went on.
Virutally all are deceptive/misleading due to phrasing. If the one about muscles were true, for example, then we'd be strong enough when our brains decided we should be ----- and, in the example given, lifting a car off a child would snap our femurs. It doesn't. This is a physiological response due to *adrenaline*, and if you think you don't hurt after, you're mistaken. Situs inversus is caused by a rare combination of genetic factors, and most with SI do NOT have the ciliary dyskinesia (PCD for short). And you get PCD without having SI. And so on. So, please, do not take these as "fact". (signed, have my MD)
Well, having been a nurse they absolutely CAN believe me about the poop vomit, and CPR in a bathroom and having a cardiac arrest with the whole poop ( and vomit) thing. Worked in CCU. LOVED it BTW. Been there too many times for all 3. Cool Leo! Didn't know that.
Load More Replies...Nobody said this, but you can cut out about 40-60% of your liver and it will grow back.
A lovely function for transplant patients. Regrowth means living donors are an option.
Load More Replies...10% of the population has 6 lumbar vertebrae instead of 5. I found this out when I needed a spinal fusion.
Dear reader. You are now blinking manually. Your breathing has also been shifted into manual mode. You're welcome :)
So, the overall message is human bodies are both totally awesome and totally nonsensical ;D
Yep. In short: That's med school in a nutshell. "WOW!" and 'What the what?"....
Load More Replies...Add one more. Human DNA is way more diverse than we give it credit for. There are huge areas turned off that can give us giraffe necks, different hair and skin colors and a huge variety of other differences. It is believe that for space travel to other planets the DNA can be adjusted to adapt to our new environment.
Actually not that suprising. Just compare a Chihuahua and a Great Dane. Both are still genetically expressions of a same specie.
Load More Replies...While I agree with those who already posted that many of these are misleading because of how poorly worded they are, or plain factually wrong, I hope for our sake the general public hasn't come to expect learning medicine/anatomy/physiology on an entertainment site that holds no fact checking responsibilities. I hope this incites curiosity to learn more about the human body! Please look up reputable authors that have books accessible to the wide public. I recommend Oliver Sacks' books, a neurologist and writer for fascinating trips into the human nervous system!
Fascinating post. Thank you for creating this but get a better proof reader.
I think English isn't the first language of the authors of this page.
Load More Replies...You should be better than this, BP. WAY too much BS in this thread, and bad writing.
Your brain makes up quite a lot of the colours that you think you see. For instance there is no frequency of light that is magenta. Brain just fills in the gaps between colours
I LOVE THIS, more like it please! We all have great facts too contribute. If you think you don’t, you’re wrong. :)
those are interesting. I hate that tomorrow i will have already forgotten all of them
Interesting but many are inaccurate or need more explanation because they are not well written
Load More Replies...Who are these posters and what are their credentials? What are their sources? Some of these "facts" are just BS. Please don't believe everything you read on the internet.
The TLDR version of what i said. Agreed. they're wildly misleading, interpreted very oddly at best, or just weirdly click-baity.
Load More Replies...A few of these are nonsense. I dearly wish a bit more fact checking went on.
Virutally all are deceptive/misleading due to phrasing. If the one about muscles were true, for example, then we'd be strong enough when our brains decided we should be ----- and, in the example given, lifting a car off a child would snap our femurs. It doesn't. This is a physiological response due to *adrenaline*, and if you think you don't hurt after, you're mistaken. Situs inversus is caused by a rare combination of genetic factors, and most with SI do NOT have the ciliary dyskinesia (PCD for short). And you get PCD without having SI. And so on. So, please, do not take these as "fact". (signed, have my MD)
Well, having been a nurse they absolutely CAN believe me about the poop vomit, and CPR in a bathroom and having a cardiac arrest with the whole poop ( and vomit) thing. Worked in CCU. LOVED it BTW. Been there too many times for all 3. Cool Leo! Didn't know that.
Load More Replies...Nobody said this, but you can cut out about 40-60% of your liver and it will grow back.
A lovely function for transplant patients. Regrowth means living donors are an option.
Load More Replies...10% of the population has 6 lumbar vertebrae instead of 5. I found this out when I needed a spinal fusion.
Dear reader. You are now blinking manually. Your breathing has also been shifted into manual mode. You're welcome :)
So, the overall message is human bodies are both totally awesome and totally nonsensical ;D
Yep. In short: That's med school in a nutshell. "WOW!" and 'What the what?"....
Load More Replies...Add one more. Human DNA is way more diverse than we give it credit for. There are huge areas turned off that can give us giraffe necks, different hair and skin colors and a huge variety of other differences. It is believe that for space travel to other planets the DNA can be adjusted to adapt to our new environment.
Actually not that suprising. Just compare a Chihuahua and a Great Dane. Both are still genetically expressions of a same specie.
Load More Replies...While I agree with those who already posted that many of these are misleading because of how poorly worded they are, or plain factually wrong, I hope for our sake the general public hasn't come to expect learning medicine/anatomy/physiology on an entertainment site that holds no fact checking responsibilities. I hope this incites curiosity to learn more about the human body! Please look up reputable authors that have books accessible to the wide public. I recommend Oliver Sacks' books, a neurologist and writer for fascinating trips into the human nervous system!
Fascinating post. Thank you for creating this but get a better proof reader.
I think English isn't the first language of the authors of this page.
Load More Replies...You should be better than this, BP. WAY too much BS in this thread, and bad writing.
Your brain makes up quite a lot of the colours that you think you see. For instance there is no frequency of light that is magenta. Brain just fills in the gaps between colours
I LOVE THIS, more like it please! We all have great facts too contribute. If you think you don’t, you’re wrong. :)