In later tellings, he eventually became a cicada (tettix), eternally living, but begging for death to overcome him. — Wikipedia
Without looking it up, what percent of the population do you think live past 100? — Bitter Crank
What were the best years of your life, so far? — Bitter Crank
When will you be ‘old’? 60? 70? 80? 90? 100? 100+? — Bitter Crank
Without looking it up, what percent of the population do you think live past 100? — Bitter Crank
Do you hate or fear the idea of getting old and needing assistance for some tasks? — Bitter Crank
If you had a choice, at which age would you like to die an easy death? — Bitter Crank
If you are “old”, when do people stop being “young”? (When did you stop being “young”?) — Bitter Crank
What might be some advantages to being old (not “getting older”— but being downright “old”)? — Bitter Crank
what percent — Bitter Crank
No idea. — I like sushi
if you were born 2000 onwards then you're more than likely going to reach 100. — I like sushi
I have always been astonished by old men who tell me they still feel 25. — Tom Storm
Global warming might start trimming the population at all ages. Not just the heat, but social disruption. — Bitter Crank
They probably don't feel physically like age 25. When I say I feel young, I mean mentally, but what do I mean by that?
— Bitter Crank
I'm rather uncertain about this but I believe IQ=Mental Age/Bodily Age×100. — TheMadFool
I'm rather uncertain about this but I believe IQ=Mental AgeBodily Age×100IQ=Mental AgeBodily Age×100. — TheMadFool
Using your formulation, I would become less intelligent as I got older, even if my mental acuity stayed the same. — T Clark
Go read books Bitter Crank old chap! — TheMadFool
a concrete measure of intelligence cannot be achieved given the abstract nature of the concept of "intelligence" — Vince
Using your formulation, I would become less intelligent as I got older, even if my mental acuity stayed the same. — T Clark
As one ages, usually past the 20s, there is cognitive decline — Vince
As one grows up to become an adult so does their brain and their intelligence, but not their IQ. — Vince
In the last 10 years I've read more and better books than I had previously read in 20 years. Time, at last. And Amazon + the iPad.
I like books that clearly explain how things came to be. So, How The Mountains Grew: A New Geological History of North America by John Dvorak is an excellent history of the planet from dust ball to what you walk around on now. A different area of explanation came from Barons of the Sea: and their race to build the world's fastest clipper ships by Steven Ujifusa. This was about the British/American/China trade in tea -- and illegal opium. Great fortunes were made in this trade, among them Warren Delano's--grandfather of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Speed in shipping mattered then, as now. One wanted to be the first into port with the narcotic (China) or tea (New York and London).
This is all much more meaningful now than when I was in college. Geology 101 was a great course, but I hadn't seen much geology myself--beyond a low hills and river valleys. The most significant geological feature where I grew up was loess, dirt blown off the receding glaciers. I hadn't seen a Great Lake, an ocean, a mountains, or a canyon yet. Continental drift was a fairly new concept in 1965.
The next book is Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America by David Fischer. The 'four seeds' were Puritans (East Anglia), Quakers (North midlands), Cavaliers (southern England) and the Scotch-Irish (borderlands and Ulster). From a Puritan POV, the Cavaliers and Scotch Irish were a liability, creating the slave-holding South and the troublesome Appalachians. The feeling about liabilities was and remains mostly mutual.
The New England Puritans (liberal Yankees) and the Cavalier/Scotch Irish (southerners and Reagan Republicans) are still with us. I come from the upper-midwestern Yankee Land.
The level of stupidity I inhabited when I started college was very deep. I think, believe, hope, and claim I've come a long way since then. — Bitter Crank
This is correct
Edit: I think the terms actual age or chronological age should be used rather than bodily age. It often refers to biological age, which is about how messed up your body is for your age. — Vince
IQ - A number representing a person's reasoning ability (measured using problem-solving tests) as compared to the statistical norm or average for their age, taken as 100.
Using your formulation, I would become less intelligent as I got older, even if my mental acuity stayed the same. — T Clark
As one grows up to become an adult so does their brain and their intelligence, but not their IQ.
— Vince
Aren't these statements ignoring 'plasticity' - the ability of the brain to become more complex (more connections among neurons) over time? And if the brain is fully developed by the mid 20s, that surely doesn't necessitate immediate decline thereafter. No plateau? — Bitter Crank
resources in the brain that turn mental tasks to automatisms — Vince
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