Mainframes
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revolutio said:Actually that is its rectum. It's actual stomach comes out of it and engulfs food.
Dude sick!
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revolutio said:Actually that is its rectum. It's actual stomach comes out of it and engulfs food.
As queasy as my stomach has been yo uwould have to bring that up? LOLJet Black said:I always thought the way flies do it is pretty cool.
I knew my drunk red neck room mate was a primitive beast!Philosoft said:Lots of less complex animals have incomplete digestive systems. They have one opening - whatever goes in also has to come out.
Philosoft said:Lots of less complex animals have incomplete digestive systems. They have one opening - whatever goes in also has to come out.
I agree with this. Food entering the stomach directly from the stomach would require a much stronger digestive system and a painful excretionary process. I suppose the mouth could have been on the hand, but that would make the arm complex and weaker in a way. Same with the leg. The butt would make it impossible to see what your eating. The mouth being at the opening where the wind comes in is actually the most efficient place. It is somewhere that is a distance from the stomach, and something that the hands can manipulate food in front of easily. You may choke every once in a while, but that's your fault. Utilize those teeth as much as you have to, and don't breath when there's food in the back of your mouth.LorentzHA said:It is so mechanical digestion can occur followed by chemical digestion. If food went directly into your stomach you would be in a world of hurt. The teeth are actually part of the digestive system (one of the 11 major body systems).
I disagree.Michali said:The mouth being at the opening where the wind comes in is actually the most efficient place. It is somewhere that is a distance from the stomach, and something that the hands can manipulate food in front of easily. You may choke every once in a while, but that's your fault. Utilize those teeth as much as you have to, and don't breath when there's food in the back of your mouth.
I was under the impression that non-baby humans are unique in this respect. All other mammals can eat/ drink and breathe at the same time (as can new born humans) as the larynx is high up in the throat, so air and food do not mix. After about 6 months, a human's larynx "moves down" the throat to facilitate speech and we can no longer do the two together.Data said:I disagree.
It would be more efficient to have wide nostrils, and allowing breath only through them. No choking, but all the benefits. I beleive the cheetah has this kind of system.
\Jet Black said:having a mouth in your head, (and a crossing windpipe and foodpipe) is indicative of either an idiot designer, or a blind process which just selects for whatever happens to be the most successful at the time. There are lots of other examples of bad design, such as our knees, the shape of the appendix, the coccyx, the extensor coccyxis, vertebral discs, and so on. I am glad you brought up this important point against ID, thankyou.
*yawn*fortheloveofmike said:\
how are all these bad designs?
fortheloveofmike said:\
how are all these bad designs?
Yes you make some excellent points, but I still see an intelligent design behind it all (however I am not proposing it is the Christian God). There are definately areas that could use improvement. You make a great point with respect to hyaline cartilage. Also I think cardiac tissue and neural tissue could use a better regenerative process because as of now if either of these tissue types like hyaline cart. gets damaged there is not much that can be done since neural and cardiace tissue differentiated and specialized-regen would have been a nice feature however!!Gormless said:vertebral discs, and why they are bad design, showing they either evolved or were the work of an incompetent designer:
The vertebral discs do not handle continous compression well. In quadrupeds, this isn't a problem as the spine doesn't carry the upper body mass. In humans they do. Further, due to the arrangement of the discs in relation to the spinal nerve, a failure of the disc (due to excess compression), will release the pulpus nucleosis, which compresses a spinal nerve, leading to severe back pain.
A sensible designer would have enlarged the facets of the zygopophyses, in order to put load-bearing discs there. Further a change to the neural arches would have ensured that rupture would not result in pressure being applied to the nerve. Finally, routing blood vessels through hyaline cartilage would allow the tissue to regenerate after damage.
If you want to believe in classic design (rather than design through evolution, then ID means Incompetent Design.
G.
There is a reason for every part in the body some things just appear pointless at this time because evolution has done away with several features of Homo sapien.Data said:"the shape of the appendix"
It gets infected very very easily, due to its shape.
"the coccyx, the extensor coccyxis"
Yup. There is a muscle to move the tail bone. But the tail bone is fused and solid. Pointless.