My friend, I come in peace. I only want to learn more about your particular engine, and in the process, bring some fundamental ICE theory to the table where it may do some good. Your sig actually implies that you "do with your money as others see fit" and perhaps that is because your profession is not linked to ICE theory, not that theory ever does anybody any good anyways. Are you doctor by any chance? That is my intended career path, but I am not there yet (finishing my master's first). The body is alot like an engine, the oil pump is like the heart, the lungs are like the combustion chamber (sort of), the brain is like the ECU (also sort of
). metabolic pathways in the body are complex whereas in an engine it is fairly straightforward. I suppose it also wouldn't hurt to point out that physics plays a large role in both, ...
Can you tell me what movie follows your line of "I come in peace"...hint : it was uttered by Dolf Lundgren..
sorry I am unfamiliar with television and movies, some of my time is spent studying, the rest I try to be active, weightlifting, sprinting, any opposites of sitting in front of a computer (or TV)
This is the part where I lecture you about posture and joints, cartilage and bone remodeling. Did you know cowboys used to form bones on the insides of their thighs? If you use part of the body constantly over time it will take measures to protect and build itself from future wear, to better sustain that wear. A baby has to start walking before a large process on the femur will develop to sustain the rigors of walking. An Astronaut in zero gravity will lose muscle over time because gravity is no longer present as a stimulus. All of these examples show us that when used a certain way, the body will adapt, with bone formation or muscle development or hormone output and many other variables. So sitting in a chair all day long is just as much of a stimulus as any of these, the body will adapt to that stimulus, every bone in your body is able to re-form (bone is alive as much as your liver or heart is) to adapt.