The science program, "vetensakpens värld" as translated from Swedish to, "science world" (aired about 2013), had an interesting episode related to the ,"things that happen when you're in your 70's or 80's.
Also , it included the subject of the, "telomera" as the ,"immortal cells of the body's immunity".
Basically , one of the film crew members had to put on a suit to simulate what it would be like to walk as a 80 year old. The thing was, that the experiment involved a suit that
simulates the effect of tension on the body's various ligaments. The case subject reported back ,that, "it is very difficult to move around".
As such, the experiment continued to the case subject lifting a cup of coffe and reporting that the cup weight like a 10 kilogram weight and was very difficult to lift with the arm and difficulty in holding on to it.
How may we feel this ahead of ageing and how would we know it?. Well it involves the 6th sense and what you perceive in the 6th sense.
There are new scientific definitions from this as the precise locations of the 6th sense and the effects of the sense of ageing as opening the chapter on, "universal peace" which many search for and many define as the ,"grail" or the, "fountain of youth".
The facts are that the definition of the, "ligament ageing" is translated to the 6th sense.
While you are reading this, Steven Greer from ,"sirius disclosure" is making peaceful alien contact of the, "fifth kind".
So when we make extra terrestrial contact we will be going from 5 th kind to 6th kind.
from
Wikipedia
date 2019
may 15
Proprioception (/ˌproʊprioʊˈsɛpʃən, -priə-/[1][2] PROH-pree-o-SEP-shən), is the sense of self-movement and body position.[3] It is sometimes described as the "sixth sense".[4] Proprioception is mediated by mechanically-sensitive proprioceptor neuronsdistributed throughout an animal's body. Most vertebrates possess three basic types of proprioceptors: muscle spindles, which are embedded in skeletal muscle fibers, Golgi tendon organs, which lie at the interface of muscles and tendons, and joint receptors, which are low-threshold mechanoreceptors embedded in joint capsules. Many invertebrates, such as insects, also possess three basic proprioceptor types with analogous functional properties: chordotonal neurons, campaniform sensilla, and hair plates.[3]
The central nervous system integrates information from proprioception and other sensory systems, such as vision and the vestibular system, to create an overall representation of body position, movement, and acceleration.
The sense of proprioception is ubiquitous across mobile animals, and is essential for the motor coordination of the body. Proprioceptors can form reflex circuits with motor neurons to provide rapid feedback about body and limb position. These mechanosensory circuits are important for flexibly maintaining posture and balance, especially during locomotion. For example, consider the stretch reflex, in which stretch across a muscle is detected by a sensory receptor (e.g. muscle spindle, chordotonal neurons) which activates a motor neuron to induce muscle contraction and oppose the stretch. During locomotion, sensory neurons can reverse their activity when stretched, to promote rather than oppose movement.[5][6]
More recently proprioception has also been described in flowering land plants (angiosperms).[7][8]
Also , it included the subject of the, "telomera" as the ,"immortal cells of the body's immunity".
Basically , one of the film crew members had to put on a suit to simulate what it would be like to walk as a 80 year old. The thing was, that the experiment involved a suit that
simulates the effect of tension on the body's various ligaments. The case subject reported back ,that, "it is very difficult to move around".
As such, the experiment continued to the case subject lifting a cup of coffe and reporting that the cup weight like a 10 kilogram weight and was very difficult to lift with the arm and difficulty in holding on to it.
How may we feel this ahead of ageing and how would we know it?. Well it involves the 6th sense and what you perceive in the 6th sense.
There are new scientific definitions from this as the precise locations of the 6th sense and the effects of the sense of ageing as opening the chapter on, "universal peace" which many search for and many define as the ,"grail" or the, "fountain of youth".
The facts are that the definition of the, "ligament ageing" is translated to the 6th sense.
While you are reading this, Steven Greer from ,"sirius disclosure" is making peaceful alien contact of the, "fifth kind".
So when we make extra terrestrial contact we will be going from 5 th kind to 6th kind.
from
Wikipedia
date 2019
may 15
Proprioception (/ˌproʊprioʊˈsɛpʃən, -priə-/[1][2] PROH-pree-o-SEP-shən), is the sense of self-movement and body position.[3] It is sometimes described as the "sixth sense".[4] Proprioception is mediated by mechanically-sensitive proprioceptor neuronsdistributed throughout an animal's body. Most vertebrates possess three basic types of proprioceptors: muscle spindles, which are embedded in skeletal muscle fibers, Golgi tendon organs, which lie at the interface of muscles and tendons, and joint receptors, which are low-threshold mechanoreceptors embedded in joint capsules. Many invertebrates, such as insects, also possess three basic proprioceptor types with analogous functional properties: chordotonal neurons, campaniform sensilla, and hair plates.[3]
The central nervous system integrates information from proprioception and other sensory systems, such as vision and the vestibular system, to create an overall representation of body position, movement, and acceleration.
The sense of proprioception is ubiquitous across mobile animals, and is essential for the motor coordination of the body. Proprioceptors can form reflex circuits with motor neurons to provide rapid feedback about body and limb position. These mechanosensory circuits are important for flexibly maintaining posture and balance, especially during locomotion. For example, consider the stretch reflex, in which stretch across a muscle is detected by a sensory receptor (e.g. muscle spindle, chordotonal neurons) which activates a motor neuron to induce muscle contraction and oppose the stretch. During locomotion, sensory neurons can reverse their activity when stretched, to promote rather than oppose movement.[5][6]
More recently proprioception has also been described in flowering land plants (angiosperms).[7][8]
telomera as immortal cells. The longer the better.
The telomeras are that, which senses the ligaments and their strength as the variables of the length of the bone and the muscles as being in the relationships of the most symbiotic ,"joint receptors" as seen with the telomera head= joint receptions.
The telomera are the displacers of the extra energy of the ,"muscle tendons and tendons and their joint receptors" as the way that humans age slower in, "blue zones" such as, "okinawa, ikaria, costa rica, sardinia and other places. What we are feeling when we are in the ,"6th sense" is that we feel there are better chances at being able to move around when we are old. So the 6th sense may be of, "pure joy" as related to knowing and sensing the ,"survival" of ones own body into ,"very old age". It may be the 6th sense as the ,way that aliens interact, displace, and," think" as the way beyond disease, poverty and pollution,and their civilization as being peaceful because they have advanced to the stage of the ,"use of the ,"Proprioception" into space and zero gravity existence. |
example of a very old person as you may find in ,"blue zones".
|
Basically ,people of old from ancient ages did not have the perceptive field of many types of variables. Their world was defined as either heaven or hell , or some planet without any specific scientific explanation of where we are in the universe.
So as we have evolved, so too, the place we are in, of the universe has many perceptive fields. Such as;
1) Earth
2) in the solar system.
3) the position of the sun with other star systems
4) the milky way galaxy
5) our position in ,"intergalactic space".
5) Our galaxy position with other galaxies.
6) the galaxies of the universe and where each is positioned in reference to the universe and it's edge.
what defines this perceptive field.
According to Alonso and Chen (2008),[1]
The receptive field is a portion of sensory space that can elicit neuronal responses when stimulated. The sensory space can be defined in a single dimension (e.g. carbon chain length of an odorant), two dimensions (e.g. skin surface) or multiple dimensions (e.g. space, time and tuning properties of a visual receptive field). The neuronal response can be defined as firing rate (i.e. number of action potentials generated by a neuron) or include also subthreshold activity (i.e. depolarizations and hyperpolarizations in membrane potential that do not generate action potentials).
A sensory space can be the space surrounding an animal, such as an area of auditory space that is fixed in a reference system based on the ears but that moves with the animal as it moves (the space inside the ears), or in a fixed location in space that is largely independent of the animal's location (place cells). Receptive fields have been identified for neurons of the auditory system, the somatosensory system, and the visual system.
The term receptive field was first used by Sherrington (1906)[2] to describe the area of skin from which a scratch reflex could be elicited in a dog. According to Alonso and Chen (2008)[1] it was Hartline(1938) who applied the term to single neurons, in this case from the retina of a frog.
A sensory space can also map into a particular region on an animal's body. For example, it could be a hair in the cochlea or a piece of skin, retina, or tongue or other part of an animal's body.
This concept of receptive fields can be extended further up the nervous system; if many sensory receptors all form synapses with a single cell further up, they collectively form the receptive field of that cell. For example, the receptive field of a ganglion cell in the retina of the eye is composed of input from all of the photoreceptors which synapse with it, and a group of ganglion cells in turn forms the receptive field for a cell in the brain. This process is called convergence.
here is the translated , version into scifi science.
where the ,"retinal gangleon" is translated to the human and alien perception of the various types of identification with the types of bodies in space ,from the planet Earth to the Sun and the stars and the galaxies.
So as we have evolved, so too, the place we are in, of the universe has many perceptive fields. Such as;
1) Earth
2) in the solar system.
3) the position of the sun with other star systems
4) the milky way galaxy
5) our position in ,"intergalactic space".
5) Our galaxy position with other galaxies.
6) the galaxies of the universe and where each is positioned in reference to the universe and it's edge.
what defines this perceptive field.
According to Alonso and Chen (2008),[1]
The receptive field is a portion of sensory space that can elicit neuronal responses when stimulated. The sensory space can be defined in a single dimension (e.g. carbon chain length of an odorant), two dimensions (e.g. skin surface) or multiple dimensions (e.g. space, time and tuning properties of a visual receptive field). The neuronal response can be defined as firing rate (i.e. number of action potentials generated by a neuron) or include also subthreshold activity (i.e. depolarizations and hyperpolarizations in membrane potential that do not generate action potentials).
A sensory space can be the space surrounding an animal, such as an area of auditory space that is fixed in a reference system based on the ears but that moves with the animal as it moves (the space inside the ears), or in a fixed location in space that is largely independent of the animal's location (place cells). Receptive fields have been identified for neurons of the auditory system, the somatosensory system, and the visual system.
The term receptive field was first used by Sherrington (1906)[2] to describe the area of skin from which a scratch reflex could be elicited in a dog. According to Alonso and Chen (2008)[1] it was Hartline(1938) who applied the term to single neurons, in this case from the retina of a frog.
A sensory space can also map into a particular region on an animal's body. For example, it could be a hair in the cochlea or a piece of skin, retina, or tongue or other part of an animal's body.
This concept of receptive fields can be extended further up the nervous system; if many sensory receptors all form synapses with a single cell further up, they collectively form the receptive field of that cell. For example, the receptive field of a ganglion cell in the retina of the eye is composed of input from all of the photoreceptors which synapse with it, and a group of ganglion cells in turn forms the receptive field for a cell in the brain. This process is called convergence.
here is the translated , version into scifi science.
where the ,"retinal gangleon" is translated to the human and alien perception of the various types of identification with the types of bodies in space ,from the planet Earth to the Sun and the stars and the galaxies.