Forums > Living in Kunming > Too much communication @alienew
You're right. We're far from a finished product. But enough to thrive, albeit inflicting heavy collateral damages to our habitat. Yet the most egregious turmoil reserved for our fellow human species, particularly ourselves.
We embody a mind that does not cease its mental chattering. From day to night, we're our own judge, jury, and torturers. Executioner if you count suicide. The side-effect for evolving higher brain functions in the cortex hub network. The culprit complicit in triggering in neural tandem with aforementioned primal brain lobes in the manifestation of the self.
"They" don't try to evolve us, but attempt to recondition our behaviors. Evolution is a gradual, millennia climb up mount improbable, not a quick fix like comic book superheroes. Profit-seeking businesses merely piggyback off what evolution has already manifested. Like skilled salesmen or politicians hijacking our amygdala to elicit our emotional responses. The game has changed, but the players remain relatively the same. Our incessant mind, literally and figuratively jacked up on steroids.
When we share photos of our forced pouty lips, our pretend Michelin dinner, or our Venetian holiday (in Macau)... we addictively showcase the best versions of us, to the envy or annoyance of our social clique. Some with digitally enhanced alterations. There's an app for that. Disingenuous representation ensues.
It's our instinctive nature to broadcast to the tribe our perceived individuality. To make ourselves the more appealing catch relative to competing damsels or suitors. Our ancestors have always successfully vied for potential mates. You wouldn't be here had they failed. No different today than it was 200,000 years ago.
This hardwired proclivity echos past our primes. Moms and grandmas are now jumping off tour buses with their selfie sticks. Predisposed to promote their family wealth and attributes. Hoping to impress upon friends who may offer their daughters to hitch their 36-year old bachelor son who plays Xbox all day.
In some cases, app makers and users could mutually benefit in the sharing of personal information in cyberspace. Matchmaking platforms for instance. There may be 5,000 misses, but all you need is one hit. The opportunity to hook-up with that elusive life-long partner. Some call it fate, or soulmate. Others may call it increasing probability with perseverance, assisted by the connectivity of technology. Personal cost-benefit analysis may determine the ultimate worth of compromising privacy.
Chinese diplomat proposes bullet train to India
Posted byGiven the rock throwing spat over the Chinese and Indian border, I'm glad this BCIM project supersedes all lingering land disputes.
Both countries have their eyes on of the bigger prize: Xi's Khan-like Belt and Road Initiative, and India's golden opportunity to link up from Myanmar's Mandalay all the way down to Singapore, a sought after destination for Indian migrant working class. Politics connecting new roads.
Granted Malaysian's newly elected prime minister Mahathir Mohamad may create potential roadblocks for the Malaysia-Singapore railway section. Perhaps all the massive Chinese residential projects in Johor Baru are rubbing the locals the wrong way.
Exploring the curious world of Yunnan mushrooms
Posted byUnfortunately, Toad the mushroom has garnered much negative attention these couple of days...
Exploring the curious world of Yunnan mushrooms
Posted byApart from tasting good, some of these fungi endow pharmaceutical values in their chemical makeup, producing life-prolonging chemotherapy drugs and antibiotics, They are truly magical mushrooms. An estimated 362 new species were identified in China just last year. Probably most in Yunnan.
Yunnan's native son, Jin Feibao, completes 100 marathons in 100 days
Posted byPiggyback off this topic, Kenyan long-distance runner Eliud Kipchoge just broke the world record by over a minute (plus 20 seconds) in the Berlin Marathon. An amazing feat of two hours one minute and 39 seconds. Records are made to be broken, but I have a feeling this one will remain for some time.
Law prohibits new shared bike companies from coming to Kunming
Posted byI shite you not.