Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 10, 2017

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In this video, you will learn why do we fart?

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Farts are also called flatus or intestinal gas are made of gas.

Whenever you eat something, you do not swallow just your food, you also swallow air which

contains gases like nitrogen and oxygen.

Very small amounts of these gases travel through your digestive system as you digest your food.

Other gases like hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane are produced when food is broken

down in the large intestine.

Now, all of these gases in the digestive system have to escape somehow so they come out as

farts.

These gases are responsible for making the farts smell bad.

All people fart sometimes whether they live anywhere in the world.

Intestinal gas is totally normal and it is very rare for farting to be a sign that something

is wrong in the body.

However if you want to be less farty you can try cutting back on foods like beans, onions,

and fried foods.

These foods can release larger amounts of gas as they break down in your body.

Farting could be a sign that you need to, go to the bathroom because it is not polite

to fart in social settings such as class or at the food table.

If farting happens accidently just remember to say excuse me.

So that is all about farting and why do we fart.

Thanks for watching this video, if you enjoyed this video, please do not forget to like and

subscribe to our channel.

Here are some of our other videos which you may find useful.

In this channel you will get information about various health and life related topics.

Wishing you good health in your life, bye.

For more infomation >> Why Do We Fart? - Duration: 2:01.

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Why do our skeletons have so many bones? - Duration: 4:05.

[PHONE RINGING]

Hi, it's Doug.

These are my favorite pajamas.

They're awesome.

They're even realistic, check this out.

This is a model of the human hand

and there's the pajamas right there.

It's pretty detailed, isn't it?

Someone named Gideon has a question about skeletons.

Let's give him a call.

[PHONE RINGING]

Hi, Doug.

Hi, Gideon.

I have a question for you.

Why do our skeletons have so many bones?

That's a great question.

We do have a lot of bones.

Scientists have counted them and found out

that there are more than 200 bones in our body.

But before we can answer why there are so many,

think about this.

Why do we even have bones at all?

I mean, what good are bones?

What do they do for your body?

What do you think?

Now would be a good time to pause the video and discuss.

OK, you ready?

Well, when thinking about what bones do,

funny enough, it might be helpful to think

about a building like a skyscraper.

When people make a building, first they

start with some kind of steel or wooden beams.

They create a structure.

Something that's in the shape of the building.

And only once they've done that, do

they add the walls, the windows, the roof, and so on.

Sometimes, we even call this the skeleton of a building.

Your skeleton is no different.

The bones are like the steel beams of a building.

They give your body its structure.

Now, imagine for a second if you had no bones at all.

What would happen?

Think about it, you'd just flop over.

You'd look like this.

There'd be nothing to hold you up.

So, that's what bones do for us.

They give us a structure.

But why so many bones?

Why do we have over 200 bones in our body?

Take your hand, for example.

You can see in this x-ray of a hand, there's a lot of bones.

Just in the top part of one finger there are three bones.

What's the point of that?

Use your imagination again.

Imagine if your finger had only one bone in it,

what would go wrong?

You can see, there'd be nowhere for your finger to bend.

You couldn't bend your finger.

Each of the places on your body where

you can bend something, that's called a joint.

So you see, by having more than one bone in each finger,

that allows your finger to bend.

Now, think of all the places on your body that can bend.

Your neck, your legs, your arms.

You see, if you didn't have so many bones in your body,

you wouldn't be able to move in so many ways.

So in summary, without bones our body would have no structure.

You literally couldn't stand up.

And by having so many bones, that allows our bodies

to bend in many places.

Without that, we wouldn't be able to move.

That's all for this week's question.

Thanks, Gideon for asking it.

Now, we have something special for this week's episode.

If you have time, my friends and I here at Mystery Science

have created a step by step activity that combines science

with art.

You can find a link to the activity

at the end of this video.

OK, for the next episode.

I reached into my question jar and found

three questions submitted to me that I'm

thinking about answering.

When this video is done playing, you'll get to vote on one.

You can choose from, why do spiders bite?

Do bats really drink blood?

Or, how can you tell if a mushroom is poisonous?

So, submit your vote when the video's over.

I want to hear from all of you watching.

There are mysteries all around us.

Stay curious and see you next week.

For more infomation >> Why do our skeletons have so many bones? - Duration: 4:05.

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Pocket monkey Coco,Why do you like to flip the garbage can? - Duration: 1:16.

Coco,Are you turning over the garbage bin again? What's in the garbage can?

For more infomation >> Pocket monkey Coco,Why do you like to flip the garbage can? - Duration: 1:16.

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Falco Tarassaco: Why do you have animal names in Damanhur? (EN/ES/IT/DE) - Duration: 2:39.

As human beings we tend to copy everything around us

at least that is my experience

I notice that I copy a lot of the people

and it's also a reference of being sometimes or a path to be..

Repeating in Italian

and I was elaborating, reflecting

about choosing an animal for a name

for a name

and it came to me a possible answer that I would like to share

but it is also a question

Is it a focus for the energy of the animal and the connection

as a way of focusing the copying that we have?

It is an interesting question

It's one thing, the use of the mirror neurons

very often many species imitate others

of the same species, learning

Our training is based on observation

The choice of animal names has two fundamental origins

One, to connect ourselves to life

to the world as a singular thing

not distinct, human, animal. It is a single thing

The second is trying to, by using that name

bringing attention to those animals

to safeguard that species as much as possible

bringing at least attention

Many are at-risk species, species that are disappearing

so having the attention of someone who identifies with it

spiritually

is an additional connection with that animal

This is the reason

For more infomation >> Falco Tarassaco: Why do you have animal names in Damanhur? (EN/ES/IT/DE) - Duration: 2:39.

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Why do so many people love having sex in public places? - Duration: 13:53.

Why do so many people love having sex in public places?

I checked out the footage online.

(it was a slow news day, okay?).

and I felt almost nostalgic.

"Young love," I thought wistfully,.

as I made pancakes for the kids.

"They must really be into each other.

It's been a long time since I've had.

sex on a train platform.

A very long time, since I've never.

actually had sex on a train platform.

Still, I vividly recall the thrill of risky sex,.

sneaking a shag in when there's a good chance of being caught.

Most of us will, if only from our younger days.

Who didn't smuggle their boyfriend into their room and.

have a quickie before their parents got home?.

It feels subversive and exciting,.

with a shivery sense of triumph when you succeed.

Or, er, so I hear.

Yep, this is certainly taboo.

Source:Twitter  .

Having sex in public places is a little more.

kinky than sneaky bedroom sex,.

but it's on the same continuum.

And, as sexologist Nikki Goldstein explains to me,.

sex in public is a fairly standard fantasy.

It is illegal, and so it is taboo,.

and we are all turned on by the idea of a taboo.

Even sharing the stories is fun.

How many brilliant conversations have.

begun with the titillating words,.

"what is the weirdest place you've ever had sex?.

" (For the record, my second weirdest.

was in a stair well during a party.

And no, you don't need to know the first.

  Yep, these two were not shy.

Source:Twitter  .

So what kind of person actually goes through.

with the fantasy and has sex in public?.

Well, according to Nikki,.

some public sexers are attention seekers,.

and others are just trying to be kinky.

Some have agoraphilia,.

and become aroused from having sex in public.

Most enjoy the risk of being caught.

, rather than actually being sprung mid coitus.

And then there are those who actually enjoy.

being watched having sex,.

which is when kink veers into exhibitionism.

I've never been an exhibitionist.

(except when it comes to karaoke),.

but my desire for privacy has increased.

exponentially since having kids.

It's difficult to get any private time at all,.

let alone have sex uninterrupted in my own house.

The risk of being caught is a complete mood killer.

; instead of fantasising about public sex,.

I fantasise about locked hotel rooms and.

a reliable babysitter for the kids.

So is parenthood the end to public-sex fantasies?.

Well, not necessarily, says Nikki Goldstein.

, who explains that getting sprung by.

one's children is very different.

to getting sprung by another adult.

"Getting caught having sex by your kids.

is very awkward.

Getting caught by a stranger,.

on the other hand, isn't the end of the world.

If you take a mum and dad who are always.

worried about getting caught by their kids and.

put them in a park to have sex, they will still feel excited.

Probably, I think.

Just perhaps not a play park.

We are all utterly sick of them.

For more infomation >> Why do so many people love having sex in public places? - Duration: 13:53.

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Hope: Why We Invest All Our Energies into a Future We Can't Predict | Victoria McGeer - Duration: 3:11.

What is it about our way of inhabiting our own agency that makes us so directed towards

future states of affairs that we don't completely control whether or not they come about?

So these are things that may happen.

They're things that we can work towards, but we never have any guarantee that they

will happen.

And yet we invest a lot of our energy in that.

I've come to think of that as a very special and characteristic feature of our own human

agency, that we are structured in that way.

We just do not have very fulfilling or happy human lives if we're not directing our agency,

our energy towards those anticipated events, hoped for events.

When we think about human development we're a very atypical kind of species insofar as

when we're born, unlike most other species, we have very little self-standing capacity

to survive in the world.

We need other people.

We need our parents.

We need other caregivers to help us develop the kinds of skills or capacities we need

to be able to survive, to be able to flourish in our world.

So we rely on others to give us those skills, to teach us those skills, to enable us to

become fully fledged autonomous individuals.

And that process is a long drawn out one and it involves a certain important relationship

with our caregivers that they're able to structure our environment in such a way that

they bring us little by little into certain rather complex sorts of engagements with the

world, allowing us little by little to build up our capacities for linguistic engagement,

for the kind of skills we need to play with toys.

You know when you think about very early development and the way a mother may be interacting with

her child.

Showing the child how to handle a toy or something so the child now comes to be able to do it

for him or herself.

Those are very small acts but those are the way we build up all our skills through our

long protracted development.

And that's what psychologists have called parental scaffolding that we treat our infants

as if they're capable of doing things that they're not quite yet capable of but we're

structuring a world for them in which they're able to try and explore their limitations

and maybe be frustrated at times.

But slowly, little by little, learn how to do things for themselves that they couldn't

do initially.

For more infomation >> Hope: Why We Invest All Our Energies into a Future We Can't Predict | Victoria McGeer - Duration: 3:11.

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Why Do We Hiccup? - Duration: 1:50.

In this video, you will learn why do we hiccup?

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Hiccups are noises that come from your diaphragm which is a dome-shaped muscle at the bottom

of your chest.

When you inhale, the diaphragm pulls down to help pull air into the lungs.

When you exhale, the diaphragm relaxes and air flows out of the lungs back out through

the nose and mouth.

But sometimes the diaphragm becomes irritated and when this happens, it pulls down in a

jerky way which makes you suck air into your throat suddenly.

When the air rushing in hits your voice box your vocal cords close suddenly and you are

left with a big hiccup.

Some ways that you can irritate the diaphragm are by eating too quickly or too much, an

irritation in the stomach or the throat, or feeling nervous or excited.

Usually hiccups last only for a few minutes but in some rare cases can last for days or

even months.

Some of the things you can do to get rid of hiccups are by holding your breath and counting

to 10 and another is by drinking a glass of water.

You can also try to put some sugar under your tongue, it might work.

So that is all about hiccups, why do we hiccup and how you can get rid of hiccups.

Thanks for watching this video, if you enjoyed this video, please do not forget to like and

subscribe to our channel.

Here are some of our other videos which you may find useful.

In this channel you will get information about various health and life related topics.

Wishing you good health in your life, bye.

For more infomation >> Why Do We Hiccup? - Duration: 1:50.

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Why Do Coins have Heads and Tails: History in a Minute (Episode 47) - Duration: 1:30.

Hello everybody. Philip Campbell here with Homeschool Connections' History in a

Minute. I am your bearded, nerdy history guru and today's question is: How come

the front of the coin is called the head and the back is called the tails? Now you

might think it has to do with the American Quarter which has George

Washington's head on the front and a bird, the American Eagle, on the back

but it actually goes back way further than the United States of America.

Actually, most historians think it goes all the way back to the Greek and Roman

times and Athenian coins, which had the head of the goddess Athena on the front

and Athena's sacred animal the owl on the back. And the owl was featured

prominently with its with its tail, its tail feathers, hanging down. And so heads

because the head of Athena tails because of the tail of the owl, Athena's sacred

bird on the backside. And because of the fame of the Athenian coinage, that

terminology passed into common use. And of course the heads of rulers have

always been on on the fronts of coins. So that's it's fairly obvious. But hey at

any rate if you want to learn more little history tidbits, I encourage you

to subscribe to this channel. Comment. Visit homeschoolconnections.com for

more information on my history courses and on Catholic education in general. And

always remember, history is awesome.

For more infomation >> Why Do Coins have Heads and Tails: History in a Minute (Episode 47) - Duration: 1:30.

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Christ Centered Conversations: "Why Do I?" - Duration: 2:51.

Today I'll be talking about not just one article in particular, but this entire series that

we are going to look at also.

He's going to look at.

Yes.

And basically this series is the "Why Do I" series.

And for me, the rationale, or at least the thought behind this entire series was to actually

really explore my faith (Our faith) and not just, yes, our faith.

But also explore the intricacies of the faith.

Sometimes I feel like we have a lot of preconceived notions that we've haven't really thought

about and once we talk about it, we realise "eh, I'm not too sure about why certain things

are done this way".

Like, why is it the Eucharist is done in such a manner.

Why was it that the Church is still called a Holy Church even though we know of historical

facts of corrupt popes, of buying indulgences.

Sometimes when we get posed questions about it by our other friends whom might not be Catholics,

we get stumped at times because we've haven't really thought about it; we've just accepted

it wholesale.

And I think Socrates once said that "the unexamined life is not worth living" and I think even

with Ignatian spirituality -- the whole idea of examining your life, examining where God

was in your life in that day, also becomes -- for me at least -- the foundation of why I wanted

to do this series of the "Why Do I?".

If we don't even understand our faith and we're not accepting of our faith in all its

entirety, not just the parts that we like, the parts where Jesus gives us the nice happy

truths but also the parts where we sometimes struggle with, the areas the aspects of faith

that sometimes we ourselves don't really hold fully.

And if we don't look at it, explore it, then I think that we end up being like a Pharisee,

in a sense.

We accept the laws that are comfortable and useful and convenient for us and we ignore

the parts that we don't want to think about.

And so, hopefully, it'd engage y'all and I hope you enjoy the series and I hope

you get something out of it.

Bye!

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