I often watch EBS's documentary Prime.
What I saw today is a broadcast about brain science.
How mechanical we are.
There are about three conclusions.
Your brain makes a decision 0.3 seconds before your decision. In other words, humans have no free will.
You send electricity to a mass of neurons, which is about the size of a little finger inside your brain.
Humans can not immediately feel that they have stopped all their actions completely and have not even stopped.
At the center of the brain is a white network between neurons, and similarly, every human being has a storage area depending on the form of the word.
In other words, how this white network is connected determines human tendencies, personalities, and abilities.
So that's not my decision. It's what the brain tells you to do.
Now, logically, as I've come to the conclusion of A, my brain is constantly forcing me to choose B.
It's called prejudice.
This has to do with programming.
Programming is a series of decisions.
It is the fate of developers to be haunted by decisions all day long.
But the decision is not what I do, it's what the brain is doing.
That is, the superficial knowledge that we know only from the head is not really available in the actual process.
If the brain doesn't think so, but understands only logic, then we have ambiguous programming.
So the programmer is not going to know by listening to other people's conclusions.
You have to take the time to train, and let neurons in the brain improve their algorithms.
When you get hurt, it takes time for it to return to normal.
What makes life different from machines is that it takes time to move cells.
The 10,000 hour rule is right.
So coding is programming.
Programming is like music, art, and boxing.
Programming requires training.
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