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/sci/ - Science & Math


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10769613 No.10769613 [Reply] [Original]

Basically, it's an augmentation that could prevent the brain from sloshing around violently in the skull, thereby eliminating concussions. Remove the patients the top part of the patients skull and attach little peices of cartilage in the shape of a thin string to the skull. Once the top of the skull is put back, the cartilage will begin to attach itself to the brain in various areas. This would basically suspend the brain inside your skill in a still manner. Any shaking of the skull would not cause damage to the brain because it is suspended indefinitely by the cartilage that is attached to the inside part of the skull. Is this plausible or am I a brainlet?

>> No.10769619

Should I draw a picture?

>> No.10769657

>>10769613
When I used to be a muscleman. We used to get get earthed. Slammed to concrete, grass, etc. you name it but there was always my cousins head. I’d earth him and earth him and earth him. But always felt the vibration from the earth differently. Almost as if his head distributed the shock better than everyone else. Sort of like a basketball vs a box made from the same rubber. You’d realize there box doesn’t bounce but the basketball does because it distribution vibration just to itself. Meanwhile the other distributes it all around. Still he’s the smartest out of us all.

When I investigated a group of people. They are carrying out selective reproductive research for those genes.

>> No.10769662

>>10769657
WHAT?!

>> No.10769665

>>10769657
So every time we’d earth other people it’d sound like pow. Everytime id earth him. It’d be like a hollow bm bm. And the earth around would shake. Then he’d get up like nothing.

>> No.10769757

>>10769619
Yes.
>>10769657
Which genes are those?

>> No.10769767

>>10769613
I mean, I guess. But, what's the point? Who would voluntarily undergo this prcedure and all the risks it entails (Death, brain damage, etc.) for the minor gain of not being afflicted by concussions as easily?

>> No.10769992
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10769992

>> No.10770006

>>10769613
I'm pretty sure there's a reason our brain is suspended in liquid instead of being strung by cartillage. Any physical interaction with the brain generates signals, and I think I'd rather have my brain bang against a big surface than being pierced by cartillage nails in the case of an accident.

>> No.10770027

>>10770006
It doesnt pierce in , it would attach to the outside like an adhesive, the only issue is how to get cartilage to attach

>> No.10770066

>>10770027
I'm talking about when they're in function, it's not gonna be a unison surface, there's gonna be tons of small points for the brain to slam into. Instead of the force being spread out evenly, you'd have it channeled into tons of tiny points