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  1. #1

    Default Pondering the Belly Button and Other Mysteries of Life

    All,

    Does anyone know where the belly button connects within the body?

    Yeah, I was pondering mine in the tub this afternoon...and realized I had no idea what it was connected with inside.

    I place that mystery along with things like...how and why mammalian species [[well MOST species) chose to 'evolve' into dualing genders for procreation...why gravity works...how the atom holds together...why anything has solidity and substance...


    ...and why most nobody ever seems to question and doubt these things!


    Any other true mysteries y'all have, or real and true answers and solutions to any of them?


    Cheers!

  2. #2

    Default

    Oh yeah...and I truly wonder who figured out the coffee bean. I mean...who realized it had to be roasted JUST SO, then ground before soaking it all in water somehow...gaining us one of life's basic neural exciters, with caffeine-molecule shaped receptors in the nervous system?!

  3. #3

    Default

    If you cloned yourself, and then killed the clone, would that be suicide or murder ?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
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    2,606

    Default

    I had a feeling this was a Gannon thread when I saw the title. Get out of the tub and Google your questions.

  5. #5

    Default

    It was my understanding that the point of having two genders is to diversify the gene pool, allowing for better adaptability and evolution within the species.

  6. #6

    Default

    Damn, Pam.

    Where will that get us? I'll learn, then report it here, and y'all will ignore me.

    That is NOT the Socratic method...

    Cheers

  7. #7

    Default

    Yeah, JL, THAT is surely entropic...it sounds as if we're anthropomorphizing the whole deal...trying to get it to make human sense as if 'evolution' somehow had intelligence behind it.

    Curious twist, that.

  8. #8

    Default

    Given the extreme friction in mere human mating ritual, wouldn't a few hundred thousand years be enough to adapt to single-sex procreation?

  9. #9
    Stosh Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gannon View Post
    Given the extreme friction in mere human mating ritual, wouldn't a few hundred thousand years be enough to adapt to single-sex procreation?
    Are you suggesting that we should all f$#k ourselves? No thanks. You first.
    Last edited by Stosh; April-01-09 at 02:12 PM.

  10. #10

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gannon View Post
    Given the extreme friction in mere human mating ritual, wouldn't a few hundred thousand years be enough to adapt to single-sex procreation?
    Two-sex procreation allows one mate to go kill things to eat while the other has offspring.

    As for extreme friction, there are products for that.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
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    Default

    Two-sex procreation allows one mate to go kill things to eat while the other has offspring
    .

    Look up "hunter -gatherer" cultures. The mates having offspring also contributed to what was eaten.

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Pam View Post
    .

    Look up "hunter -gatherer" cultures. The mates having offspring also contributed to what was eaten.
    Yes I was oversimplifying. Allow me to rephrase for Pam:

    Having two genders allows the two mates to divide duties, perhaps according to each's ability, or perhaps in any other equal and fair manner they agree upon fully with consent from each individual, with both individuals being considered equal contributors to the process.

  13. #13

    Default

    Pam - that's funny...When I saw the title of this thread I thought perhaps our youngest son had joined Dyes! He's always been fascinated with his belly button and constantly does "belly button maintenance", much to the disgust of his mother and his wife! How in the world he can manufacture so much lint in such a small space is beyond me!

  14. #14

    Default

    Gannon - Gerhard Reibmann, a Berlin psychologist, sees the belly button differently from Hamilton Bailey. He believes that you can diagnose a person's life expectancy, general health and psychological state purely by looking at their belly button. He paid for the publication of his own book, which he called Centred: Understanding Yourself Through Your Navel.

    This is quoted from: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/in...=1006041418468 -

    You can check your local bookstore and see if they have a copy! Happy pondering buddy!

  15. #15
    Join Date
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    Default

    Allow me to rephrase for Pam
    Much better, thanks.

  16. #16
    ccbatson Guest

    Default

    The vessels that run internally from the umbilicus to the circulation of the fetus occlude right after birth, shrivel and are digested away, just like the remainder of the umbilicus that falls off on the outside.

  17. #17

    Default

    Simplify, CC. Does that mean that the belly button isn't connected to anything, and is just a leftover bundle of skin the sits atop a muscle?

  18. #18

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jcole View Post
    Simplify, CC. Does that mean that the belly button isn't connected to anything, and is just a leftover bundle of skin the sits atop a muscle?
    I pondered, than lost interest.

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jcole View Post
    Simplify, CC. Does that mean that the belly button isn't connected to anything, and is just a leftover bundle of skin the sits atop a muscle?
    I dunno, but it was one of the few times CC has brought anything meaningful and non-combative to the discussion...

    I think we should all look at this as a postive

  20. #20

    Default

    Thanks, Cc.

    Is it ONLY circulation...sharing blood?

    No nervous system connections?

    Nothing else strange about it, besides the well-evolved or adapted shriveling function?



    Hey y'all, give a fellow a break, let's make this a new start...no lingering feuds or attitudes. Until proven otherwise...I've always felt Cc to be merely misunderstood and forced to play the heavy!

    Cheers from sunny Tennessee!

  21. #21
    ccbatson Guest

    Default

    No nervous system, however, lots of blood born hormonal connections that are linked to neurologic functions via the neuro-endocrine axis. Frankly, a little understood corner of medicine.

  22. #22

    Default

    Thanks for that, Cc.

    I guess not enough learned folks have cared to study theirs!

  23. #23
    ccbatson Guest

    Default

    Interesting stuff, not very practical information though.

  24. #24
    Ravine Guest

    Default

    I don't think mine is very interesting.
    I wouldn't mind studying Toni Braxton's, though.

  25. #25

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Ravine View Post
    I don't think mine is very interesting.
    I wouldn't mind studying Toni Braxton's, though.
    Cross post to chicks we dig?

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