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To: WilliamofCarmichael
I have always wondered if that's true then why?

Why not?

You assume the brain is designed to trigger a pleasant sensation when death comes. It could just be a random byproduct of the brain getting killed cell by cell. Kind of what happens to my harddrive when running several read/write operations and just switching it off.

Anyway, I'm sure your questions, or our questions, will be solved eventually. On way or the other.
124 posted on 02/04/2004 3:59:59 PM PST by SkyRat (If privacy wasn't of value, we wouldn't have doors on bathrooms.)
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To: SkyRat
"You assume the brain is designed to trigger a pleasant sensation when death comes. It could just be a random byproduct of the brain getting killed cell by cell. Kind of what happens to my harddrive when running several read/write operations and just switching it off. "

I know you are responding to someone else but this flies in the face of the evolutionists. According to the Darwinists only the adaptions that make a species more suitable to the environment persist. Creatures become more and more niche specific. An adaption that makes death less unpleasant does not enhance survival.


In the same vein since I have thought about things that defy evolutionary thought. There is a valve in mamilian ears that allows for pressure equalization. Everyone is familiar with the growing pressure in the eardrums when ascending while traveling.

The pressure imbalance is corrected by a valsalva.

Why would a feature that is necessary only in the age of speed have become a mamalian feature prior to it being necessary. No animal can move fast enough up a height for this feature to be useful.
379 posted on 02/11/2004 9:32:54 PM PST by TASMANIANRED (black dogs are my life)
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