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Aug 17, 2006 10:30 AM
by Mark Jaqua
Re: More Human-Animal Differences I think I saw on an animal program that opossums have opposable thumbs, so maybe also we are not the only creature with opposable thumbs. (Of course they don't have much of a brain.) I saw somewhere that we share about 99.+% of DNA with chimps. So maybe it is something to do with the subtlety of our brain tissue and nerves - number of connections, maybe chemical makeup on a molecular level, etc. If it is something on a very subtle level that makes us human, or suitable vehicles, and very subtle distinctions that determine how well one's brain works, - it also follows that all this is subject to very subtle forms of damage - the type that never gets measured in hospitals or given a damn about - drugs, x-rays, cat scans, isotopes, flouroscopes, chemotherapy. I know from personal experience to my own satisfaction that too many x-rays, cat scans, et.al. Definitely fry a person's brain. I've got no doubt about it personally. (Also after sitting in front of a big CRT monitor for 1000's of hours - and then switching to a flat-panel LED one, I say that makes a difference for the better also.) (Most all this medical stuff is done by technicians, half of who are nuts, and no cumulative record is kept, and they love to fry unpopular philosophers.) So watch out all you fellow old farts, for that smiling doctor dealing in death. - jake j. --------------------------------- Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+ countries) for 2¢/min or less. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]