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by moneywoes 1265 days ago
Wait toothbrushes are a concern?
4 comments

Everything is a concern. It's not often that humanity gets it right the first time, so the trick is to be ready to make changes when new verifiable data comes to light.
Thank you for saying that. I personally always found it confusing that people at some point simply say 'I am done learning anything new' as if their current model of the world is already perfect. I might understand there is a physical memory limit, but I sincerely doubt it is even scratched for most people.

I understand the evolutionary underpinnings for it ( 'what I did got me this far did it not?' ), but it is still not a great excuse for a conscious being.

It's not as if it's a hard limit, and you become incapable of absorbing additional facts beyond a certain point. If anything, the human mind seems best adapted to ongoing learning, as it seems to store (and discard) information in terms of relational strength.
> people at some point simply say 'I am done learning anything new'

Yeah, it's not good to do that, but how is that related?

The "evolutionary underpinnings" are a sound rationale, not an excuse. Not for completely eschewing new information but being conservative in making changes.

Dental procedures and even tooth brushing increase blood bacteria levels. In addition to aerosolizing, they also reach circulation through gingival lesions caused by the procedure. Once in the blood, they can colonize the heart and cause endocarditis.

https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.7...

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12212870/

Poor oral hygiene is linked to heart disease too
And dementia
I knew a guy once who had very serious heart trouble after a teeth-cleaning. This is not even an unknown phenomenon -- cleaning your teeth does make small wounds in your gums, and oral bacteria can get into your bloodstream.