Re: Birthdays and ages
Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2014 11:48 pm
He lives in the Netherlands, incognito, the worst that can happen is he'll end up falling into a prickly bush if he crashes his bike.
heheAdsolution wrote:He lives in the Netherlands, incognito, the worst that can happen is he'll end up falling into a prickly bush if he crashes his bike.
Best period of my life so far.DandyGuy wrote:I wonder whats its like being in your 20s?
This.DesLife wrote:Best period of my life so far.DandyGuy wrote:I wonder whats its like being in your 20s?
As you still refering to the childish version of a lie? I also still lie a lot to my parents, but most of the time, I know it's because I don't want them to be worried or to annoy me even more because I'm already feeling guilty about something. You know, a kid lies because he wants to hide stuff anyway so his parents won't blame him.Adsolution wrote:I still lie to my mother all the time, and I probably will for years to come! Though I can't say I've ever taken money.
Well, i can say.Adsolution wrote:I still lie to my mother all the time, and I probably will for years to come! Though I can't say I've ever taken money.
fucking clocksaerleiya wrote:EDIT : Wait, what? Why is my post before yours? I saw yours before I wrote this one.
Both, really. You can't be honest with unreasonable people.saerleiya wrote:As you still refering to the childish version of a lie? I also still lie a lot to my parents, but most of the time, I know it's because I don't want them to be worried or to annoy me even more because I'm already feeling guilty about something. You know, a kid lies because he wants to hide stuff anyway so his parents won't blame him.
My child hood is a mystery wrapped inside of a riddle in an enigma. Anyways I agree I always here people reminiscing about the 90s (anybody with an internet connection probably heard something like this.) And has I recall (read) the 90s seemed like a dark ear of history. (Not has dark has the 1900-1940s) And I don't see becoming an adult much different them being a kid or teen. (Unless you decide to Have kids and a family, then its a HUGE difference and you have to take on more responsibility.) (I am well aware of noticeable differences like earning money.) Also everybody gets smarter everyday. (Unless your like some heavy drug user.)Adsolution wrote:When people say this, I usually attribute it to them not remembering their childhood correctly - memories are distorted, you inflate the extremes - when you're feeling nostalgic, you extract the good, and just the good. It's difficult to recall exactly how it was, but in most cases, you weren't necessarily any happier than you are now. No matter what age you were, there were problems to overcome, there were ups and downs, and the only difference is that as you grow, the bigger problems you start to face equate to your bigger brain. Problems that once seemed relevant meaningful turn small and trivial, and problems that were once far too 'big/adult/complex' for you to even care or think about now become relevant and meaningful.OldClassicGamer wrote:At least, being kid is fun and no worries about important stuff.
You don't think you've gotten any smarter over the past 20 years?OldClassicGamer wrote:And isn't intelligence something you are born with?
WTF is this utter BULLSHIT ? Define "intelligence" please, cause you don't seem to know what that is. Also, quoting a philosopher doesn't make your message less dumb.OldClassicGamer wrote:@Dandy
Getting smarter and intelligence is something completely different. Despite getting smarter, intelligence is something you can't change. Getting smarter every day means gaining more knowledge and that is true because when we are born, we are "blank slate" how Aristotle said. But intelligence is same when you are 3, 13 or 33, and it does not change. Bottom line, knowledge and intelligence are two different things.
If you think none of those change as you grow up... I can't do anything for you.Mainstream Science on Intelligence (1994) wrote:A very general mental capability that, among other things, involves the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend complex ideas, learn quickly and learn from experience. It is not merely book learning, a narrow academic skill, or test-taking smarts. Rather, it reflects a broader and deeper capability for comprehending our surroundings—"catching on," "making sense" of things, or "figuring out" what to do.
Well, for starters, I don't live with my parents anymore : got a place of my own. As a student (and soon as an engineer), I get to hang with people with interests very similar to mine. I actually work on interesting things, I have tons of side projects, I learn a lot, I party a lot... I enjoy myself much more than ever before.DandyGuy wrote:@DesLife How so?
This is just wrong however. In a more technical sense, intelligence very heavily relates to relative cranial capacity, and no animal has nearly as large a cranial capacity relative to their size as we do.OldClassicGamer wrote:Animals are another proof. Some animals are more intelligent than humans but they don't have knowledge we do.
i remember the time when you wanted to have a Neanderthal brain because it was bigger than ours are nowdays. :3Adsolution wrote:This is just wrong however. In a more technical sense, intelligence very heavily relates to relative cranial capacity, and no animal has nearly as large a cranial capacity relative to their size as we do.
Did we really need to ba able to think abstractly to win? Practicality includes building stuff to beat your opponent, no?Adsolution wrote:Lol. Unfortunately, I gather that their brains, while bigger, were more likely more geared toward practicality rather than abstract thought, which is why we won.
Ergo, brain development doesn't exist.OldClassicGamer wrote:Bottom line, knowledge and intelligence are two different things.