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Ten Things We Still Don't Understand About Humans

ParticleGirl writes "New Scientist has an article examining 10 human features (bugs?) that we still don't understand, like blushing, laughing, and nose-picking. There are some interesting, speculative evolutionary explanations listed for each. '[Psychologist Robert R. Provine] thinks laughing began in our pre-human ancestors as a physiological response to tickling. Modern apes maintain the ancestral 'pant-pant' laugh when they are tickled during play, and this evolved into the human 'ha-ha.' Then, he argues, as our brains got bigger, laughter acquired a powerful social function — to bond people. Indeed, Robin Dunbar at the University of Oxford has found that laughing increases levels of endorphins, our body's natural opiates, which he believes helps to strengthen social relationships.'"

8 of 397 comments (clear)

  1. Nose picking? by 18_Rabbit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's not to understand? It clears the nose!

    1. Re:Nose picking? by Abstrackt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And it dislodges whatever blowing your nose couldn't.

      --
      They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but it's not one half so bad as a lot of ignorance. - Terry Pratchett
    2. Re:Nose picking? by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, man, I know what you mean. Totally understand. I've felt that one. Nothin' like going from 1% clear nasal passages to 1% blocked.

      Very few things in life feel better.

      Mods: I'm 100% serious. Putting aside any personal feelings of disgust, how many of you agree? You all know it's true.

      --
      Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
  2. Re:Teenagers? by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right and wrong. Teenagers are an invention. It used to be that you went from late childhood (13 - 14) into adulthood. There's a reason why many people had little more than an 8th grade education - after that you were expected to join the world of work. Alexander the Great had pounded much of the world into submission by the time he was 20. "Teenagers" as we understand them are a product of post WW2 western culture as a market for commodity capitalism in the face of expanding resource bases. As resource bases contract and the world goes back to a solar economy, expect the teenager to disappear.

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  3. debated != "mystery" by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Example: Altruism.

    It actually seems pretty obvious -- a community which was altruistic would, in the long run, have a higher chance of survival than a community which wasn't.

    Another example: Superstition. I love this bit:

    Religion offers another possible evolutionary benefit of superstition.

    So... how is religion not superstition? Now you've got two mysteries, instead of one. And the same explanation still holds:

    Our ancestors would not have lasted long if they had assumed that a rustle in the grass was caused by wind when there was even a small chance it was a lion. And it is worth making false-positive mistakes to get these relationships right.

    Basically, religion and other superstitions are maladaptions of our ability to recognize patterns -- and an acceptable alternative to missing some pattern. Better to be paranoid than to be gullible -- better to be afraid of the tiger that isn't there than to be eaten by the tiger who is.

    I suppose these aren't proven, but I do find this pretty weak, even for a "top 10" list. It's not "mysteries" so much as "cases which are not yet airtight".

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  4. Is slashdot going the way of Digg? by lalena · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've all heard the joke about how to get on the front page of Digg.
    Your article title should be "Top X {Reasons|Ways|Games...] To [Pick Up Girls|Make your own Fusion Reactor...]"
    Yesterday on /. it was an article on 10 failed mouse designs. Today it is 10 things we don't know about the human body.

  5. Re:Teenagers? by Rozine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because society expected teenagers to work in the past doesn't mean that there aren't significant mental (physical brain) changes going on during that timeframe.

    And resources contracting back to a "solar economy"? Turn in your geek card - geeks believe in the power of technology to improve lives. There's no reason to expect that that won't continue.

  6. Re:Teenagers? by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's also why the world used to be a much more brutal place. Teenagers and their hormones and persecution and superiority complexes and need to prove themselves need to be contained until they mature a bit. Alexander the great sounds cool until you realize it was a guy with a god-complex (literally) running around with a private army slaughtering people everywhere he went to prove he was bigger and better than his daddy Philip.

    --
    If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.