Humans

Recommended Videos

MrAkuma201

New member
Oct 28, 2009
258
0
0
"They may seem quirky but the best explanations for them often have profound implications."
Here are some theories on why we do those things we do and some of the problems:
1 - Blushing: Charles Darwin struggled to explain why evolution made us turn red when we lie, which alerts others. However, some think it may help diffuse confrontation or foster intimacy by revealing weakness.
2 - Laughter: mood-improving endorphins are released when we laugh, which seems an obvious reason to do it but a 10-year study muddied the waters when it found more laughter is produced by banal comments than jokes.
3 - Kissing: the explanation for kissing is unlikely to be genetic as not all human societies do it. There are theories that it is associated with memories of breastfeeding and that ancient humans weaned their children by feeding them from their mouths, which reinforced the link between sharing saliva and pleasure.
4 - Dreaming: Sigmund Freud's theory of dreams expressing our subconscious desires have been generally discredited and it is recognised that they help us process emotions, but the reason why we see such strange visions has not been properly explained.
5 - Superstition: unusual but reassuring habits make no evolutionary sense; however, ancient humans would have benefited from not dismissing a lion's rustle in the grass as a gust of wind. Religion seems to tap into this impulse.
6 - Picking your nose: the unappealing but common habit of ingesting 'nasal detritus' offers almost no nutritional benefit, so why do a quarter of teenagers do it, on average four times a day? Some think it boosts the immune system.
7 - Adolescence: no other animal undergoes the stroppy, unpredictable teenage years. Some suggest it helps our large brain reorganise itself before adulthood or that it allows experimentation in behaviour before the responsibility of later years.
8 - Altruism: giving things away with no certain return is odd behaviour in evolutionary terms. It may help with group bonding or simply give pleasure.
9 - Art: painting, dance, sculpture and music could all be the human equivalent of a peacock's tail in showing what a good potential mate someone is. However, it could also be a tool for spreading knowledge or sharing experience.
10 - Body hair: fine hair on the body and thick hair on the genitals is the opposite of what occurs in primates, our close animal relatives. Suggested reasons for pubic hair include a role in radiating scent, providing warmth or even protecting from chafing.

What do you guys think?
 

Popadoo

New member
May 17, 2010
1,025
0
0
I read somewhere laughter was originally a message to others that something was safe. Think, if you laugh at slap-stick, it's probably because YOU aren't the one falling over, you are safe. Say a tribe hears a rustling, they check it out, the person at the front realizes it's safe and he laughs. Our humor evolved over the millennial. Just a theory I read somewhere.
Also, kissing to improve others immune systems.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
Legacy
Jul 18, 2009
20,519
5,335
118
What about yawning?

Even animals do it yet there seems to be absolutely no reason for doing this, but still we do. And no, it's not for the sake of inhaling a large quantity of oxygen, That's been disproven.

Some things we just do without any real explaintion of why.
 

isometry

New member
Mar 17, 2010
708
0
0
usmarine4160 said:
isometry said:
What is the explanation for laziness?
Don't make me do stuff :(
Haha. I mean evolutionarily though, wouldn't it be better if we never got lazy?

I mean sure, we only have a finite amount of energy before we need to eat and sleep, so getting tired makes sense. But why would we evolve to be lazy even at times when we have plenty of energy?
 

Valagetti

Good Coffee, cheaper than prozac
Aug 20, 2010
1,112
0
0
It makes me feel so arrogant and smug that I know all this.
So heres a cat!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=dCKKICgTw8A
 

Kae

That which exists in the absence of space.
Legacy
Nov 27, 2009
5,792
712
118
Country
The Dreamlands
Gender
Lose 1d20 sanity points.
Wait people blush when they lie? This is actually news to me, I thought it was something else, I've never seen someone blush because they lie, most of the times is because of something I don't actually know the word for, so instead I'm going to give examples of situations where people blush.
Well the other day I was at work and we were slacking off because there were no clients and the girls asked another male coworker that he had muscles and he had a good body and then he blushed and didn't know what to say, I'm pretty sure there's a word for this but I don't know it.
Alternately when I blush is in similar situations like when I touched my girlfriends hand or just made eye contact during a date.
So I'm pretty sure Blushing does not equal lying, maybe partly but it must be something else too so it covers this sort of stuff too.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

Better Red than Dead
Aug 5, 2009
48,836
0
0
usmarine4160 said:
isometry said:
usmarine4160 said:
isometry said:
What is the explanation for laziness?
Don't make me do stuff :(
Haha. I mean evolutionarily though, wouldn't it be better if we never got lazy?

I mean sure, we only have a finite amount of energy before we need to eat and sleep, so getting tired makes sense. But why would we evolve to be lazy even at times when we have plenty of energy?
Because until a massive failure of infrastructure occurs we have delayed the concept of survival of the fittest. When it eventually does hit us it's going to be with a train.
Or a series of trains.
 
Dec 14, 2009
15,526
0
0
Kissing is actually a way that women expose themselves to small amounts of herpesvirus in order to build up an immunity instead of having one huge dose during conception, at which point it's too late and the woman will lose her baby.
 

BrassButtons

New member
Nov 17, 2009
564
0
0
isometry said:
Haha. I mean evolutionarily though, wouldn't it be better if we never got lazy?
Evolution doesn't make things the best they can be. Evolution just makes things good enough. If being lazy isn't getting us killed before we can reproduce, then it's not going to get selected out.

There might be an advantage to not using up energy unless necessary (if you're lazy most of the time, then when that hungry lion shows up you'll have spare energy to run away) but it's also entirely possible that we're lazy purely because laziness hasn't prevented us from having kids.
 

Superior Mind

New member
Feb 9, 2009
1,537
0
0
Casual Shinji said:
What about yawning?

Even animals do it yet there seems to be absolutely no reason for doing this, but still we do. And no, it's not for the sake of inhaling a large quantity of oxygen, That's been disproven.

Some things we just do without any real explaintion of why.
I was thinking about this a week or so when I was on an army exercise. We were conducting an ambush and the weather turned to absolute shit. I had to basically lie motionless in a bush with my rifle while getting saturated with rain, (I later realised that the area I was in actually filled with water and I was mostly submerged.) Anyway, I noticed that I was yawning a lot and what's more was that when I yawned I would shudder a little and this would heat up my core temperature. There have been suggestions that yawns act to regulate body temperature and I reckon there's some strength to this theory.

The yawn symptom where when we seemingly have to yawn when we see yawns or even have yawns suggested to us I have no idea about. For example while writing this I have yawned about ten times.
 

IamLEAM1983

Neloth's got swag.
Aug 22, 2011
2,581
0
0
Totally off-topic, but thank you, OP. Thank you for disproving my fears. I read your thread title and thought "Oh, great. Another teenage misanthrope come to wail about how we're all mean and feckless poopyheads. Another one of *those* threads."

I was wrong. Yay!

As for the discussion proper, yawns seem to be used by dogs as a way to show they're trying to process what's happening or shown to them. They're basically trying to make sense of something. It's a pretty flimsy theory at best, though, seeing as:

a) I picked it up from Wikipedia;
b) We just don't yawn because we fight against boredom or disinterest in lectures or conferences.

Here's another weird question for you, though: where does winking come from? Why have we developed winking as a meaningful gesture?

Just putting that out there, in case anyone has theories.
 

MrAkuma201

New member
Oct 28, 2009
258
0
0
That's coz you don't fill you'r lungs up 100% with each breath so you yawn for two reasons.

1. Fill you'r lungs up 100%

2. Rush oxygen to the brain to help wake you up.