| Humans may have echolocation abilities which are | | | | suggests my acquaintance in a round-about way, |
| much better than once thought. There are always | | | | perhaps by watching others use echolocation, even |
| articles in science journals about deaf people who use | | | | another similar species, and in doing so perhaps |
| this ability. It seems that when a person does not | | | | humans could relearn echolocation techniques, |
| have all that visual data to process, it frees up much | | | | because in watching and observing the activity, they |
| of the spatial reasoning areas of the brain, so it | | | | would be triggering the dormant neuronal ability, and |
| makes sense a person without vision would use this | | | | their mirrored neurons would fire them up? |
| for something else. | | | | Is this even possible, maybe? Most primates are |
| But, what if others, those of us without visual | | | | VERY good imitators, unfortunately very few are |
| impairments had the same abilities, only since we | | | | good at original thinking. Humans = Primates. Just |
| never practiced, we never needed to use them. | | | | better at some things than the others, although as |
| Remember most folks who live in the first world | | | | you go out into public you may shake your head, |
| have power and lights, or live in the city, and don't | | | | that humans are much smarter than the other |
| need to navigate in the dark. And studies show that | | | | primates - I do on a daily basis in fact. |
| if you blind fold people and talk to them, they | | | | Indeed, humans are probably capable of all the |
| inherently know the size of the room they were in? | | | | senses we see in other animals, such as echolocation, |
| Why, or rather how you ask? | | | | sonar, infrared, tetrachromacy, sense of being looked |
| It appears to be an innate skill. What do I think of | | | | at, or even pre-cognition, thinking out of time, or |
| this? Well, I am glad you asked because, you know, I | | | | observing out of location - some of which has been |
| do very much believe that humans do have | | | | proven scientifically, but for some reason appears |
| echolocation abilities due to my own observations, | | | | academia is having trouble understanding it so they |
| but with the advent of all this technology, have little | | | | call it pseudo-science. |
| use for it, and as such no place to practice it. But, I | | | | It may be that human civilizations have indeed |
| can say, that as a former runner, often at night, in | | | | forgotten more than they've ever learned in the |
| the dark on trails, one becomes aware of much | | | | present period. But in the future it would seem with a |
| more. | | | | little help from science they could get a boost |
| Also one can easily walk through a dark house | | | | backwards to go forwards in these abilities. I suppose |
| without bumping into things merely by making slight | | | | thought swapping will be something in the near future |
| sounds. Perhaps, those cultures using click-languages | | | | 20-years or so. And in 75-100 years - assimilation of |
| might be better suited for this in Africa and Australian | | | | particles with the help of brain add-on features. |
| Outback. It seems the design of the human ear is | | | | Anyway, I hope you've enjoyed today's topic. |
| shaped that way for a reason, I'd be doubtful it | | | | I hereby dedicate this article to; Agustin Antunez |
| were by accident or merely to support its structural | | | | Corrales of Spain, who runs an online network |
| integrity so it can stick upward on theskull. | | | | meeting place for genius level humans, with several |
| Now then, what might be the best way to learn this | | | | websites which support his vision to unite human |
| skill or re-learn what you've been missing? Well, | | | | thinkers. |