m463 16 hours ago I think (loosely) of another published paper:https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2997957/“Why I Hate the Index Finger” by William L. White, M.D., was originally published in Orthopaedic Review, Volume IX, No. 6 (June 1980) pp. 23–29.
AnonC 16 hours ago Needs 2024 in the title.This article would’ve been a lot more interesting for laypeople if it had pictures showing the described muscle and tissue structures.> The most fundamental evolutionary act is motion, not cognitionThis is highly reductive. Evolution and survival cannot be explained by one single facet of a biological organism. hoseja 13 hours ago And ignores the first couple billion years just manifesting the basic biochemical machinery of cells out of chaos.
hoseja 13 hours ago And ignores the first couple billion years just manifesting the basic biochemical machinery of cells out of chaos.
dullcrisp 16 hours ago Ironic that we went and invented wheels. otabdeveloper4 13 hours ago The first real wheels were invented in the mid Bronze Age, i.e., much later than cities and pyramids and civilizations.Wheels are a recent and relatively untested contraption in the grand timeline of human inventions. janderson215 6 hours ago “This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.” tbrownaw 16 hours ago ... And then followed that up by inventing lots more different kinds of wheels.
otabdeveloper4 13 hours ago The first real wheels were invented in the mid Bronze Age, i.e., much later than cities and pyramids and civilizations.Wheels are a recent and relatively untested contraption in the grand timeline of human inventions.
janderson215 6 hours ago “This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.”
tbrownaw 16 hours ago ... And then followed that up by inventing lots more different kinds of wheels.
I think (loosely) of another published paper:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2997957/
“Why I Hate the Index Finger” by William L. White, M.D., was originally published in Orthopaedic Review, Volume IX, No. 6 (June 1980) pp. 23–29.
Needs 2024 in the title.
This article would’ve been a lot more interesting for laypeople if it had pictures showing the described muscle and tissue structures.
> The most fundamental evolutionary act is motion, not cognition
This is highly reductive. Evolution and survival cannot be explained by one single facet of a biological organism.
And ignores the first couple billion years just manifesting the basic biochemical machinery of cells out of chaos.
Ironic that we went and invented wheels.
The first real wheels were invented in the mid Bronze Age, i.e., much later than cities and pyramids and civilizations.
Wheels are a recent and relatively untested contraption in the grand timeline of human inventions.
“This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.”
... And then followed that up by inventing lots more different kinds of wheels.