|
Post by Pincho Paxton on May 1, 2024 17:33:57 GMT
Memory Division And Old Age The old saying in chess was think 6 moves ahead, and that used to be said in snooker too. The number 6 being a kissing number in 2d physics, and probably the way that the brain stores information. But hexagons in nature need to join together which gives you a wrist, and an ankle, so 6 becomes 5 fingers, and 5 toes. An Octopus, and a spider using 8 limbs from a hexagon structure means pushing the hexagon inwards to mess around with the creatures eyes to get 8 limbs around the outside.
Ok so the compartmentalised brain, and old age with memory loss probably struggles to use all of the compartments. So the 5 remaining compartments joined together by a sixth reduce to 4 most likely. This is just a theory based on kissing number physics, because I'm pretty sure that nature uses kissing number shapes for its physics.
Pincho Paxton
|
|