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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
A few days ago, I marveled at how effortlessly the human brain can perform non-trivial tasks such as reading or typing glyphs while simultaneously processing their meaning. And yet, reading is considered a relaxing activity, not even stretching our cognitive abilities much! 1/8 https://warpcast.com/aviationdoctor.eth/0xd067c5be
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Expanding on this — how is it possible that the human brain performs lighting-speed computations, such as estimating the trajectory of the ball in a game of tennis or driving a car on the freeway while holding a conversation, given the high latency of inter-neuronal communication (on the order of 10–20 ms)? Furthermore, how does it make sense that our modest wetware operating on low power and potassium-sodium exchanges can outperform silicon chips at such mundane tasks? 2/8
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Increasingly, the answer appears to be that the human brain operates like *both* a macroscopic classical system and a microscopic quantum one simultaneously. In statistical physics terms, the brain is said to operate near a critical point, much like water at the edge of boiling (phase transition), a nuclear reactor nearing a sustained chain reaction, or an ordered classical system bordering on the chaotic behavior of a non-linear system. 3/8
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
In practice, it means that the brain exhibits classical, quantum, and chaotic properties all at once. For example, neural avalanches happen at every scale of distance and time across the cortex, with no preference for any. This is called scale invariance, and it is reminiscent of the self-similarity we observe in fractals independently of scale (coincidentally, there is some evidence that neuron microtubules are organized in fractal fashion). 4/8
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