Brain Mystery

Brain remains a mystery unto itself.

Malak El-Siblani
Environmentalism
4 min readDec 3, 2020

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The notion that humans only use 10 percent of their brain is a myth information may be stored in every part of the brain.

proposes that inequity aversion arose in humans and other species to reinforce cooperation. Cooperative societies, whether they’re animal or human, depend on social contracts founded on fairness in order to function. If the social contract is broken, the unfairness is met with protests and punishment to nip the bad behavior in the bud. De waal

The brain weighs about 3 pounds and contains around 100 billion neurons cells that carry information.

Philosophers and researchers have always been curious to know about the mystery of neurons functions of the brain.

To have an idea about the nature of human brain, you can consider it a neural super computer that has enormous speed and capacity.

It’s often said that we never fulfil our potential. And that our brains are much bigger, better and more capable than it’s even possible for us to realise. So, what if our cerebrum was let loose, and every iota of our brain’s power became available? Would we all become superheroes? Or would the knowledge be too much?

In reality, brain is a powerful beast. And yes each person has the ability to use 100 percent of his brain capacity. Wondering how?

Well, The brain that’s created a lot of different things can generate more traffic to rise the levels of memory capability. The memory has been developed in a way that it can store the needed information and save the rest for another time. That’s why brain explor further and extend the process of timing.

Sometimes you see a picture of a person you hadn’t seen before. And the you wonder where I have met this guy. In reality, generations are regenerate through decades. Also the source of informations stored is a way of life cycle. in which the world of dreams could allow you dive into the world of imagination and the reality in less than a second, Human beings nature is complex enough. Scientists shows that there’s no pure human. Testing the Power of generations reveals that humans holfs a common DNA but a lot of different identity that could identify the human nature and belongings.

The kinds of food we eat, the region where we come from. The climate and so many sources played a role in changing the environmental impact of our lives.

Consider the situation when neural tissue representing a limb is rendered redundant by the loss of that limb. Very quickly, neighbouring areas recruit that tissue into new functions, for example to represent other body regions. This shows how readily the brain utilises all available neural tissue.

The brain is the infant of his history and the children of his environment, and the adult of what he gain from the surrounding world, and the oldie of the future historical experience that transfer from one generation to another.

There is no sustainable evidence that ensures that we only use 10 percent of our neural. Modern brain scans show activity coursing through the entire organ, even during resting time, Minor brain damage can cause devastating effects not what you’d expect if we had 90 percent spare capacity.

The brain is a much more powerful machine made up of much slower processors. Each neuron seems to have a clock speed on the order of kilohertz, which are a million times slower than gigahertz. (A smartphone’s processor speed is around 1 gigahertz.).

That’s why computers are often much faster at completing specialized tasks, even though they can’t replicate all the varied functions of the human brain.

The human brain is a most unusual instrument of elegant and as yet unknown capacity.

Stuart Seaton

According to scientists. Most computational neuroscientists tend to estimate human storage capacity somewhere between 10 terabytes and 100 terabytes, though the full spectrum of guesses ranges from 1 terabyte to 2.5 petabytes. One terabyte is equal to about 1,000 gigabytes or about 1 million megabytes; a petabyte is about 1,000 terabytes.

Most computational neuroscientists tend to estimate human storage capacity somewhere between 10 terabytes and 100 terabytes, though the full spectrum of guesses ranges from 1 terabyte to 2.5 petabytes

Then if we say that the brain storage capacity is between 10 and 100 terabytes, though how much of that space is used space versus free space?

Our brain is so simple but much more complex than an external hard drive. Not only do some parts seem to be involved in many different memories at once, but it’s stored data is often being corrupted and even lost.

It is a mistake, I think, to compare the brain to a computer.

The brain is an organism, not a mechanical contraption. It can make adaptations to its own thinking mechanism based on experience. The more experience the human brain has, the smarter it gets. So far, computers are not do nothing without human brain orders. It couldn’t work without our support.

If so then what is the mechanism that energies the power of our brain?

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