There's a big house near me that just got remodeled. Iys on a major street so it might actually be zoned as commercial. There are lots of businesses that look like homes in this area. I have no idea what the new owners do. I'm just also curious about this square antenna. It doesn't seem to be pointing very high in the sky. They have a tv satellite dish which is pointed like 30 degrees up and this antenna is like 10.
So Is it like a high speed data connection to another site? Wireless internet? No logo on the antenna.
The theory is basically stating that consciousness is simply a method of the brain rationalising and predicting the ways it's going to solve novel problems, or interpret new stimuli. When this process is no longer occurring, is when we "zone out" or get completely immersed into a task to the point that we do it on autopilot, like an older monkey would climb the same tree it's done for years with no thought, or a democrat/liberal would reject each others views without a second thought. The theory is apparently highly testable through a problem-solving experiment that requires participants to "activate" their consciousness through multi-layered tasks.
-Could this mean people are "more" conscious if they take longer to complete tasks or are presented with larger amounts of new stimuli?
-Could this help explain why children seem to view adults as boring and they themselves to be more aware of their environment, as they would no longer require much consciousness on their repetitive lives whereas children would maintain a negative correlation between age and consciousness as they got older
-This could even help explain our perception of time as when you zone out time appears to move quicker, almost as if you were sleeping
-Would it be possible to manipulate one's own perception and level of consciousness in life by forcing themselves to see the most new stimuli available?
Taking Pre-Calculus 1, Public Speaking, US History to 1865 and English Reading and Written Composition 1. I go to class and take notes if it's something that isn't on the textbook or that I have a question on. I go home and turn on classical music radio, and do every homework assignment until finished. This takes about 1 hour at the most. Next I do any reading and also do reading before class. I don't study extra. Should I? I have two B grades that I'm hoping are going to turn into at least A-'s once the other assignments/exams are finished. And I have an extremely low grade in US History to 1865 that I am relying on future coursework to bring me up to at least an A- but I think I might get a B. I'm majoring in Mathematics and I guess this first semester is my "experimental" semester. How do I get perfect 100%'s on everything in the future?
What do you think of online classes? I’m taking calc 2 online and it fucking blows but my school made me do it over the vaccine. About to fail a test (got a zero in the quiz). What kills the most is I could easily just cheat the whole class with zero work and I’m sure some of my classmates will cheat and plenty of graduates have cheated but am too pussy and I’m here futile bashing my head against wall.