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Smarter Than Ever, Dumber Than We Think: Humanity’s Illusion of Understanding. Blog By Babbal Khehra

  • babbalbk27
  • Aug 2
  • 4 min read

We like to think of ourselves as the “dominant species,” the apex of intelligence, the ones who “figured it out.” But the more you actually look at reality, the more obvious it becomes, we haven’t even scratched the surface. We are stumbling through existence, high on our own cleverness, while the universe smirks in the background.


Here’s a brutal list of real, undeniable facts, things we can measure, observe, or scientifically admit, that prove we still don’t understand much of anything.





1. We Don’t Know What Consciousness Is



Neuroscience can tell you how neurons fire, how signals jump across synapses, how chemicals influence mood. But what is awareness itself? Why does electricity in a brain somehow become an inner world?


No scientist can explain why you experience being you instead of being just a pile of meat reacting to stimuli. This is called “the hard problem of consciousness,” and it’s not fringe, it’s one of the most famous gaps in science.


If we don’t even know what’s creating the voice in our own head, how can we pretend to understand reality?




2. We Don’t Control Most of Our Own Body



Your heart beats. Your lungs breathe. Your cells repair and replicate. Your gut digests food. Your liver detoxifies.


You’re not “deciding” to do any of this. Your body is essentially an alien ecosystem running on autopilot while you sit in the control room pretending you’re the one in charge.


The illusion of control is so strong we forget we don’t even know how we move our own hand, we just “decide” to, and it happens.




3. We Don’t Know What 95% of the Universe Is Made Of



Look at the stars, planets, and galaxies and that’s only 5% of the universe’s mass and energy.


The rest? Scientists call it dark matter and dark energy, placeholders for “we have no idea what this stuff is, but it’s there.”


Imagine bragging about how “advanced” we are while admitting that we can’t identify most of reality.




4. We Don’t Know How the Brain Stores Memory



We can see which parts of the brain light up when you recall a memory. But we can’t explain how the brain stores your grandmother’s face, or the sound of rain, or the exact taste of your favorite food.


Memories aren’t stored like files on a computer, there’s no “memory bank” section of the brain. They’re smeared across billions of connections, and the system is so complex that we don’t actually know how your “self” even holds together.




5. We Don’t Know What Happens When We Sleep



We know the “stages” of sleep. We can measure REM cycles. But why do we need sleep at all?


Why do we dream? Why do those dreams sometimes predict things, process emotions, or combine random nonsense into meaning?


Science can’t fully explain it. Sleep might be the most universal human experience and yet it’s still a mystery.




6. We Can’t Explain Basic Phenomena Like Time



We measure time. We schedule our lives around it. But what actually is it?


Physics hints that time might not be linear. Quantum mechanics suggests it might be reversible, or not fundamental at all. And relativity shows that time bends and slows depending on gravity and speed.


In other words, we live by the clock, but we don’t even know what the clock is made of.




7. We Don’t Know Why Placebos Work



Give someone a sugar pill, tell them it’s medicine, and their body starts healing.


The placebo effect is real and measurable, it literally changes biology but science can’t fully explain why belief alone rewires the body.


If thoughts can heal… what else are they doing that we haven’t noticed?




8. We Don’t Understand Animal Consciousness



Your dog dreams. Birds solve puzzles. Octopuses escape aquariums like criminal masterminds.


We know animals are aware to some degree, but we have no real framework for what their consciousness “feels” like or if some animals experience reality in ways we can’t even imagine.


For all we know, the “hierarchy of intelligence” we built could be upside down.





9. We Can’t Define Life Properly



What’s the difference between something alive and something not?


Viruses blur the line. Artificial intelligence might one day blur it further. Scientists have a dozen definitions for “life,” but none work universally.


We’ve been alive this whole time and we can’t even define what that means.




10. We Don’t Know What Thought Really Is



You “think” a thought. But where did it come from?


Did you create it? Did your brain generate it automatically? Or did it “arrive” from somewhere else?


Every major culture has its own mythology for inspiration, intuition, and “divine ideas.” Maybe it’s not mythology. Maybe it’s an admission that thought itself is a doorway we don’t understand.





The Conclusion: We’re Infants Pretending We’re Engineers



Every single one of these facts is mainstream science. No woo, no speculation, just things we already know we don’t know.


We can split atoms and edit genes, but we don’t understand the basic nature of self, thought, time, or life.


We are a young species and maybe that’s exciting. Because if there’s this much we don’t understand, imagine how much is still waiting.

 
 
 

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