+458 i hate when teachers explain things SO in depth that you no longer know what to do, amirite?

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I don't know, do you?

by Anonymous 12 years ago

The reason for this is that psychologically when you learn something new, you only take in 10% of the stuff you learn initially. You can only absorb 10% because your brain isn't quick enough to understand things the first time they have been said, so if you've only heard something once, you're only 10% likely to remember it. But the second time, it increases. You can solve the equation to those percentages of increase simply by calculating brain mass and then dividing out the sectors of the brain that can't be used for memory. Then you put it to the power of the number of times you've heard it and root it by the amount of things you've learned. Once you've got that answer, you divide by zero and it's as simple as that! But the amount of information you learn plateaus at 84% because that is the Darwinian limit, developed by Adam Darwin, the psychological cousin of Charles Darwin. Never confuse them. The results could be disastrous, just as the Disaster Theorem of Hardoxy states.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

WTF man.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

You're right, I only absorbed 10% of what you said.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

you just explained that so much in depth that I no longer know what to do

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I absorbed that we only absorb 10% of information first presented to us and something about a Darwin saying we max out at 84%

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Try going to Bergen Tech.

by Anonymous 12 years ago