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I mean all the science knwon till this moment, add to it all the sience to be known in the future?

2006-12-18 19:41:04 · 6 answers · asked by aloreefy 1 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

6 answers

Not even close. The human brain is limited. The facts and theories of science are not.

This is the reason that science is broken down into smaller divisions like biology, chemistry, physics and so on. The world's greatest expert on DNA mapping would have a very hard time understanding the details in multimonomer synthetic plastic chemistry. A specialist in liquid crystal synthesis might be totally lacking in the ability to do the math required for a PhD study of fuzzy logic.

Even if humans lived for thousands of years (instead of just tens of years), Science is expanding faster than the ability of any human to keep up. The problem is not just the data input rate, but also the ability to connect new information with known concepts.

Decades ago, Albert Einstein remarked (in replying to a general question about chemistry) that "Chemistry is too hard for Chemists."

In terms of understanding: Do you really know why you ate whatever you consumed last?

2006-12-18 20:30:41 · answer #1 · answered by Richard 7 · 17 1

Well .... Physically there is a limit to the amount of stored data in a material object which is controlled by the Entropy of the system, but the maximum amount of data is huge, but I don't know if it is huge enough to be theoretically sure to say '' yes our brains could .... '', also there is another limitation, that data storage in our brains is controlled by other slower members, but I can say with a sufficient confidence '' No '', because the science itself isn't limited to what we recently know, or even what will be known at all, I think nature was created with rules to guide it through the time not to be fully understood.

2006-12-18 20:15:48 · answer #2 · answered by wadgare2 1 · 0 0

It's not important to REMEMBER. It's to understand, store , and use when necessary. A simple example telephone directory. We don't remember every number, but we know them and refer to book when necessary.

2006-12-18 19:51:45 · answer #3 · answered by indike111 4 · 0 0

Everybody's brain knows everything already.
You only must be able to remember it.

Th

2006-12-19 09:56:39 · answer #4 · answered by Thermo 6 · 0 0

Oddly enough, many experts agree that our Brain cannot comprehend all of the ability's of itself. (Basically it does so much we cant understand just HOW much we can do!!)

2006-12-18 19:43:20 · answer #5 · answered by united_nations_pilot 2 · 0 1

Yes, it can. And I am living proof. All you have to do is search out my answers to questions and behold: THE POWER!!!

Just kidding God.

2006-12-18 19:45:42 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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