Neuroscience for the elderly.

Paul

New Member
Location
Marble,N.C.
I studied neuroscience because I wanted to know more on how the brain worked. Then I gave a neuroscientist my thoughts on how the brain and mind stored words when writing and the like. They didn't know how that worked. :confused:

I hypothesized that the brain at birth created a mind storage bank and deposited all the words there. After growing up and learning how to write spell and such when the writer writes they have what is called a word stream of words in there mind. As they type/write speak the mind accepts the best word out of the mind stream and morphs the thought into a word spoken or written.
:)

They refused to say anything at all. It makes common sense to me? They have the PHDs, I have my opinion at seventy. I might try to talk to them again just to aggravate them. When a person sits down to eat and swears they will not over eat then they overeat ( like me)...what happens? Mr conscience ask's them "why did you overeat, reminding them they overeat. There might be hope for me yet at my age! i heard at age seventy two it's wine women and song. Oh Lord! Paul
:)


 

I hypothesized that the brain at birth created a mind storage bank and deposited all the words there. After growing up and learning how to write spell and such when the writer writes they have what is called a word stream of words in there mind. As they type/write speak the mind accepts the best word out of the mind stream and morphs the thought into a word spoken or written.
They have the PHDs, I have my opinion at seventy. I might try to talk to them again just to aggravate them. :)

They refused to say anything at all. It makes common sense to me?

Well Paul, now it's obvious why I don't have a PHD because that kind of makes sense to me too.

I believe it all depends on how we're wired as to what talent or preferences we exhibit. Most seem wired to store things in 'digital' mode which makes mathematics easy for them, some of us are still working on the old analogue, visual and aural storage systems which causes words and images to get the priority storage file space.
Most people can handle both maths and language in an easy balance but some seem to set aside much more storage for one than the other and so are 'better' at that subject.

I have no idea why I've soaked up and always been interested in words yet find mathematics absolute anethema. I grew up in a family good at maths but despite their best efforts always remained at fringe retard mathematical ability level. I consider myself 'mathematically dyslexic.'
I can follow it up to around primary school level then it becomes Swahili. It's been a disadvantage in restricting my career opportunities but I got around it. Einstein overcame being dyslexic by doing a different job that doesn't need that 'word talent,' I just avoided jobs that involved adding anything up but wasn't as successful in alternative employment as ole Albert was.

I like your plan to keep aggravating them, atta boy! Bwaaahahaahaha. :devilish:
 
The whole Einstein dyslexia thing is a tenuous thread; there's scarce proof, other than hearsay that he didn't speak until he was 4 years old. It just seems to have become another "fact" of the modern-day world.

I also am not a big mathematics fan. I did all right in high school and college, but it was one of those times when you learn for the sake of testing, then promptly forget it. Writing and words have always been my forte.

But please, Paul - spare the poor PhDs! Allow them to live out their lives unmolested, happy and secure in their ivory towers. They're basically harmless, so why bother with them?
 

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