Greatness of Apparently Random Useless Facts
Posted on 28 Dec 2009 at 10:40 am | Tagged as: Baker's Dozen, Hall Of Psychology, Social Hub
For some unfamiliar cause, humanity are glad to appreciate and occasionally take up useless knowledge facts. This useless knowledge is the resultant of millenia of fact accumulation and arrangement performed by humans all over the earth. Our attraction to useless knowledge facts may be just as much a byproduct of our personal existential impulse to accumulate statistics to help us discover ourselves within that world. Our identity may very well survive in the countless knowledge gathered since the beginning of composed earthborn culture.
While we are so often confused about the import of these bits of information, we are nonethless motivated by them. Lists of these facts have been piled up for ages. Even in modern times, we see them in tomes like “Guinness World Records”, whose publication has reached the hands of countless members of our species. Within these lists, we find that our own special pursuits and neuroses aren’t so peculiar. This provides us with a level of ease that may help us proceed acting in the fashion we have become used to.
If we inhabited a culture whose goals and needs were not amassed, our our own eternal spirit might also be mangled by the sands of time.











