for example, will we ever see a three-minute mile?
8/10/2012 10:42:13 PM
Yes, there is a limit.Three minute mile I have no idea, but I feel sure that we will reach the limit before we see the 3 second mile.[Edited on August 10, 2012 at 10:47 PM. Reason : ]
8/10/2012 10:46:29 PM
not if you let people use prosthetic legs, apparently that makes them super human
8/10/2012 10:47:17 PM
world records are broken pretty much every olympics...i just wonder when breaking records will become implausible
8/10/2012 10:49:31 PM
^by hundreths of a second, not by seconds or minutes.
8/10/2012 11:03:18 PM
8/10/2012 11:11:00 PM
I would like to see what the human body is capable of. How about we let athletes dope and see what happens. 8 second 100 meter dash?
8/10/2012 11:12:48 PM
...followed by immediate cardiac arrest
8/10/2012 11:14:53 PM
8/10/2012 11:14:56 PM
No there isn't. Eventually humans will run faster than the speed of lightI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
8/10/2012 11:22:33 PM
it's more of an abstract question.i'm mistergreen and i approved this message
8/10/2012 11:29:54 PM
I actually took a class on human enhancement in my last semester. It is certainly possible to achieve such feats in the future, however, the key to the question is how you define "human".
8/10/2012 11:43:01 PM
Viagra
8/10/2012 11:47:54 PM
performance?Are you saying there's something wrong with my gear?
8/11/2012 12:01:59 AM
I would be willing to bet if you graphed most records they would look fairly exponential, and thus have an asymptote. So while records will continue to be broken each year, the margins will get smaller and smaller as they approach the limits of human capabilities.The only real question is, how much will/do humans, supplements, training techniques, etc evolve that might shift that asymptote.
8/11/2012 1:02:26 AM
3D printer could build a house in 20 hourshttp://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/3d-printer-could-build-house-20-hours-224156687.html
8/11/2012 1:12:48 AM
Yes. No.
8/11/2012 1:30:59 AM
^^thats pretty neat
8/11/2012 1:49:21 AM
Disney creates a method for turning plants into touch sensorshttp://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technology-blog/disney-creates-method-turning-plants-touch-sensors-233610134.htmlTwo crazy mindblowing ideas/inventions/technologies in 1 day. I'm impressed.
8/11/2012 2:07:51 AM
yeah thats pretty cool too, but not nearly as cool/useful/practical as the previous link
8/11/2012 2:17:02 AM
i can't figure out why they only display times to the nearest .01 second when the equipment they use is accurate to .0005 secondi saw several "ties" where .001 second resolution would have changed the rankingi guess my point is they'll have to start displaying times to the nearest millisecond if human performance continues to excel and approach the limit of what is possible[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 9:17 AM. Reason : wording]
8/11/2012 9:15:10 AM
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2012-07/fyi-will-athletes-ever-stop-breaking-records
8/11/2012 10:41:17 AM
8/11/2012 11:51:18 AM
it's not linear at allbet fit is logarithmic
8/11/2012 11:54:56 AM
I don't think this was since the inception of the modern olympics...more like last 30-40 years, which probably explains the difference. I'll try to find it.
8/11/2012 12:07:16 PM
-[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 12:15 PM. Reason : -]
8/11/2012 12:15:27 PM
Never mind, no, it's since the beginning of the modern Olympics, and to me, it looks pretty damned linear.http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/08/05/sports/olympics/the-100-meter-dash-one-race-every-medalist-ever.html
8/11/2012 12:15:54 PM
I mean, if you isolate the part of the curve where slope is low and don't use the right scale it will look linear[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 12:17 PM. Reason : shit that is a terrible graph]
8/11/2012 12:16:39 PM
what are they isolating? It has every Olympics.
8/11/2012 12:24:27 PM
Is it evolution?or is ithigher goal setting?
8/11/2012 1:10:42 PM
there wont ever be a 3 minute mile.
8/11/2012 1:19:24 PM
8/11/2012 1:25:39 PM
a woman has never run a 4 minute mile...best is like 4:11 iirc
8/11/2012 1:37:59 PM
my isolating statement was in response to your 12:07 post[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 1:42 PM. Reason : anyway, it's not linear]
8/11/2012 1:40:54 PM
8/11/2012 1:41:07 PM
There will never be a three-minute mile run by anyone who we would now classify as a regular human athlete. That is sixteen 100m dashes in a row, each at 11 seconds a piece.
8/11/2012 1:46:59 PM
^^^ Right, I was assuming the same thing--that the graph would only show the last few decades, after the curve flattened out...but once I found the graph again, I saw that wasn't the case. Maybe it's not perfectly linear; if you actually did a regression equation, there would probably be some small coefficient for a log component, but just eyeballing it, that looks close enough to a straight line to support what I was saying--that it's approximately linear enough so far that we aren't yet approaching the limit.^ The point is that these gains in the record books are so incremental that there very well could be a regular human athlete to do that in the future, as training methods, nutrition, and human evolution progress (potentially). When you get a second or two faster once every few years, it takes a long time to shave the better part of a minute off the time. Saying that no "regular human" will ever do it would be like people in 1900 saying that nobody would every break 4:00.[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 3:13 PM. Reason : ]
8/11/2012 3:08:30 PM
[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 3:09 PM. Reason : dbl post]
^^ it's definitely incredibly close to being linearWe've got more potential we can squeeze out, but I doubt it's much more.
8/11/2012 3:15:12 PM
the set of data we're talking about - of which you have not shown a graph - is not linearyou're looking at a poor graphical representation of a manipulated data set
8/11/2012 3:15:38 PM
I'm Krallum and I approved this message.
8/11/2012 3:17:15 PM
It's a simple scatterplot of all the winning times from 1896 to now. There are no shenanigans with the scales. Where is the manipulation or poor representation? I see no sleight of hand here.
8/11/2012 3:17:27 PM
8/11/2012 4:01:16 PM
So, you're saying there is no limit?
8/11/2012 4:01:32 PM
If you look at only the section of the steepest slope on a logarithmic curve, it will appear linear. that's essentially what we're looking at here.
8/11/2012 4:03:29 PM
The bible teaches that through god, all things are possibleI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
8/11/2012 4:17:33 PM
^^ Yes, I get that. I'm just saying that I don't get how anyone is claiming that we are looking at that here, at least so far. ^^^ No, not saying that. I'm just saying that it doesn't appear that we're even close to approaching it, yet. It doesn't even look like the curve is even appreciably beginning to flatten out. To me, it looks awfully close to linear for entire 116 years that we have data for.[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 4:20 PM. Reason : ]
8/11/2012 4:19:53 PM
There is no limit to what can be achieved through god.
8/11/2012 4:26:25 PM
I don't see any asymptote forming.The length between two consecutive plot points should get smaller and smaller as we approach the limit.[Edited on August 11, 2012 at 4:58 PM. Reason : /]
8/11/2012 4:54:19 PM
I see a line
8/11/2012 4:59:25 PM