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Relaxation Articles
Thanks a
Million...Years!
By Steve Wilson copyright 2008
If you've been hoping to be
the one having the very, very, very, very last laugh, stick around.
You have a long wait ahead of you. Like about a million years.
Writing for the July 2008 issue of DISCOVER
magazine, Jim Hold, provides an unusual take on why laughing matters.
His perspective is, I suspect, quite
different from the way most of us interested in this field look at
things. Using a specific scientific theory-- the Copernican
principle-- he explains why laughter will still be around a million
years from now.
I hope his prediction is
safely stored in a time capsule somewhere so someone can check up on it
because it won't be me.
According to Wikipedia,
the Copernican Principle, named after Nicolaus Copernicus, states the
Earth is not in a central, specifically favoured position.
And, since the 1990s, the model has been used for prediction of duration
of ongoing events.
Not being so
scientifically-minded, I won't bother with the mathematics here.
The formula is used for predicting how long something will last based on
how long it has already been in existence. For my similarly
not-so-scientifically-minded friends, I will attempt a brief explanation
of the formula: things that have already been around for a long
time are more likely to last longer than things that have not been
around for such a long time. Apparently, your personal life
expectancy would be an important exception. To you.
Anyway, Holt estimates that
human beings, having already been here for at least a couple of hundred
thousand years, have "a decent shot at being around a million
years from now."
Whereas, the Internet, an
infant by comparison, may not even last another thousand years.
You'd better download all you can while it lasts.
Using the Copernican model
and some logic, some philosophy, and some assumptions which I am sure
are terrific, Holt is betting that laughter will carry on at least until
the Year Million.
With the acumen we expect
from a science philosopher, he contends that in Year Million, "humor
will be esteemed as the most universal aspect of culture." That
sounds like a good thing. It seems that laughter is thought to
have evolved as a really good way for hominids to communicate to each
other that it was safe to relax. Would that be like, "Ha-Ha! The boss is
on vacation and we are photocopying unmentionable parts of our bodies?"
Scientists use a very
complex and unfathomable vocabulary for stuff like this. They tend
to use terminology like hominid, which I looked up while the
Internet was still working. It refers to any member of the biological
family of the great apes, including the extinct and extant humans,
chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. Not to be confused with
hominoids or humanoids, of course.
Holt mentions that some
scientists and philosophers talk about laughter as a "luxury reflex" in
that it "serves no obvious evolutionary purpose." I hope to
contact him soon to find out that means because I think of my laughter
as a definite necessity for getting through each day with at least part
of my sanity intact.
In his essay, Holt
speculates about what jokes will look like in the Year Million. He
thinks laughter will then largely be the result of a highly evolved form
of incongruity humor. Alas, a civilization a million years more advanced
than our own won't get our jokes. No wonder. Come to think
of it, now that we are being exposed to the new season of Last Comic
Standing, that may be their good fortune.
And, if you were wondering:
Will one of this season's new comics be the actual last comic standing?
I can tell you. Not in a million years!
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Jim Holt's essay
"The Laughter of Copernicus" is in Year Million: Science at the Far Edge
of Knowledge, edited by Damien Broderick (Atlas and Company $16). Holt
is also the author of Stop Me If You've Heard This: A History and
Philosophy of Jokes (W.W. Norton and Company)
Steve Wilson is a
psychologist, professional speaker, co-founder and Cheerman of the Bored
of the World Laughter Tour, Inc., whose mission is leading the world to
health and peace through laughter. His training workshops on
therapeutic laughter lead to the designation Certified Laughter Leader,
and are offered throughout the year. For more information, a
complete schedule of workshops, and valuable educational resources visit
the website
www.worldlaughtertour.com or call toll-free 1-800-NOW-LAFF
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Susie and Otto Collins are Relationship Coaches and
authors of 4 books on relationships and personal growth. To get their
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visit their web site at
http://www.RelationshipGold.com ===============================================
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