Website review: Deoxy.org/lil_weirdness.htm

Someone discovered this in Marine Biology 37 reviews since Apr 18, 2005
icon tagsfuturism, marine-biology, biology deoxy.org/lil_weirdness.htm

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culverin2 discovered 39 months ago
To me, this provides a glimpse of our own future evolution.. It's left me completely open-mouthed with amazement. I hope you find this interesting. "This opening of our minds was a subtle and yet a painful process. We began to have feelings which I believe are best described by the word "weirdness." The feeling was that we were up against the edge of a vast uncharted region in which we were about to embark with a good deal of mistrust concerning the appropriateness of our own equipment. The feeling of weirdness came on us as the sounds of this small whale seemed more and more to be forming words in our own language."
jolie-laide rated 7 weeks ago
Fascinating.
ajanelle rated 2 months ago
He is (was) soo right. Everything we "know" today was totally weird at one point. This article is totally fascinating. You should, like, totally read it.
zonedate rated 4 months ago
Dolphins can speak English! -"One of our clearest examples occurred when he started saying, "More, Elvar." In one session he started out with, "More, Var," slowing down his natural pace and lowering his natural frequency well into the human range. He then took Alice's whole transmission, "More, Elvar," speeded it up, took it back into his natural frequency region around 4-12 kc per second and repeated it. He then slowed it down, and lowered his frequencies down near those that Alice was producing, and reproduced, "More, Elvar" on the human scale and in the human frequency region."
Silverfox616 rated 5 months ago
Now this was a most interesting read.
Cropcircle rated 5 months ago
Just watch 'The Hitch hikers Guide to the Galaxy', it explains it all in the opening 5 minutes, but i dont believe the bit about the mice!
brycec3 rated 21 months ago
Dr. John Lilly From the page: "This opening of our minds was a subtle and yet a painful process. We began to have feelings which I believe are best described by the word "weirdness." The feeling was that we were up against the edge of a vast uncharted region in which we were about to embark with a good deal of mistrust concerning the appropriateness of our own equipment."
KaylinQ rated 23 months ago
From the page: "In March 1960 a dolphin named Lizzie had produced a sequence of humanoid noises underwater. This was the first and last time that Lizzie or Baby, the two dolphins whom we were working with during that period, produced any sounds of this type. In the pool together in St. Thomas they had produced whistles and clicks almost exclusively. The language they were using was strictly "delphinese." However, the night before she died, Lizzie (freshly isolated from Baby) said something underwater which sounded suspiciously like, "It's six o'clock," which I had just shouted to her over the water of the tank. Miss Miller and I reviewed that tape many times and each time the uncanny feeling of 1957 was evoked."
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