Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Ten things we don't understand about humans.

WHAT A STRANGE CREATURE YOU ARE
We belong to a remarkably quirky species. Despite our best efforts, some of our strangest foibles still defy explanation



But as science probes deeper into these eccentricities, it is becoming clear that behaviours and attributes that seem frivolous at first glance often go to the heart of what it means to be human.
1.

Blushing

Blushing is hard to explain. Why would humans evolve a response that puts us at a social disadvantage? (Image: Design Pics Inc / Rex Features) Even Darwin struggled to explain why we would evolve a response that lets others know that we have cheated or lied
2.

Laughter

Laughter is more often produced at banal comments than jokes, so what is it for? (Image: Jonathan Ford / Getty) The discovery that laughter is more often produced at banal comments than jokes prompts the question, why did it evolve?
3.

Pubic hair

Why humans have clumps of hair in private places is still open for debate (Image: Eryk Fitkau / Getty) Scent radiator, warmth provider, or chafe protection? The answer to why humans have clumps of hair in private places is still open for debate
4.

Teenagers

Even our closest relatives, the great apes, move smoothly from their juvenile to adult life phases, but not humans (Image: Tim Foster / PYMCA / Rex Features) Even our closest relatives, the great apes, move smoothly from their juvenile to adult life phases – so why do humans spend an agonising decade skulking around in hoodies?
5.

Dreams

Most researchers reject Freud's belief that dreams are expressions of our unconscious desires (Image: Kristy-Anne Glubish / Design Pics Inc. / Rex Features) Today, most researchers reject Freud's belief that dreams are expressions of our unconscious desires – but if that's the case, what are they for?
6.

Altruism

People still debate whether humans are genuinely altruistic by nature (Image: John Alex Maguire / Rex Features) People still debate whether humans are genuinely altruistic by nature, but if we are, most agree it doesn't make evolutionary sense
7.

Art

Sexual display, learning tool or form of social glue? (Image: Ray Tang / Rex Features) Sexual display, learning tool or form of social glue? Art still refuses to be pinned down
8.

Superstition

(Image: kaibara87 / Umberto Salvagnin / Flickr) Many of us have superstitions – odd, reassuring habits that make no rational sense – but there may be an underlying reason for such behaviour
9.

Kissing

The urge to kiss is not brought about by genes (Image: plainpicture / Folio) The urge to kiss is not brought about by genes, so why do we find it so pleasurable to share saliva?
10.

Nose-picking

Many of us do it, but eating bogeys offers little nutritional reward (Image: KPA / Zuma / Rex Features) Many of us do it, but eating bogeys offers little nutritional reward – could there be a health reason for the unappealing habit?

Source:- www.newscientist.com

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