Yay! I love the idea of the AI soldiers yelling "Run away! Run away!!!!"
It is very amusing. Heh. Actually it reminds of a fantasy story I read years ago in an anthology about how the extras in old silent movies all had a kind of immortality and that they could live forever in the margins of huge spectacles like Intolerance. It was an intriguing conceit.
The 90-95% of women who have orgasms can have multiple ones on a fairly regular basis
Huh. The numbers I saw were closer to 10%. And they're not about how frequent the multiples were. Just that 13% of women were
capable.
So you see the source of my disagreement.
The world is always more interesting than we think it is. I love that.
One of my favorite things in all the world is that cytochrome c, the same molecule that's in the electron transport chain allowing cellular respiration, letting the cell use oxygen to survive, is instrumental in setting off the signal cascades that lead to apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
letting the cell use oxygen to survive, is instrumental in setting off the signal cascades that lead to apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
"In the midst of life we are in death."
Hey, how often can I quote Wittgenstein?
The way Chaos theory practically started was by a meteorological computer siulation behaving badly.
Edward Lorenz, right? Chaos theory is cool.
I can't
believe
my work filters let me do so much orgasm googling. However, I disapprove of co-workers talking to me while I'm the midst of reading up.
Edward Lorenz, right?
Yup. Have you read James Gleick's "Chaos"? It's excellent for a popular-science book.
I've always been a little puzzled by what actually is meant by multiple orgasms. Does it refer to women having a shorter refractory period than men? Or are we talking one directly after another?
Also, has anyone else here read David Foster Wallace's Everything and More? It's about infinity.
Have you read James Gleick's "Chaos"?
Yes I have. It's a good book, I enjoyed it a lot. I've even done the water dripping thing with a laser and a photosensor.