bicep definition: 10 Things I Wish I’d Known Earlier
Bicep refers to the arm that is closest to the body when it is extended horizontally.
As it turns out, bicep is a muscle in the forearm that helps you stand up straight, and it is one of the muscles that affects the way your body moves.
I was just reading an article that mentioned this and it was really strange. The article was about how bicep is one of the ways that your brain controls your arm. This muscle is actually responsible for the movement of your arm, so to say you have bicep and nothing else is to say that your arm is controlled by nothing else but your brain.
I have a little bicep myself, and I can’t help but think that it is actually controlled by something else. In the case of bicep, it is actually controlled by your brain. Your brain has to send signals down the nerve that tell the muscle to raise up and then down and then up. That’s pretty darn complicated and I have to imagine there are a whole list of muscles that need to be involved in it.
I was actually surprised to learn that your brain controls your bicep. But I guess I’m one of those people who know what my brain is capable of doing sometimes, so I should be able to guess that your bicep is actually controlled by your brain.
It doesn’t take much to surprise me. Since I’m the one that knows more about your brain than you.
This is not a complete list. But if you were to listen to the words of your brain at times, you could be on to something. I mean, what if your brain was controlled by a robot with a bunch of electrodes on it? It would be pretty cool.
Brain control sounds like science fiction. But this is actually a real phenomenon that might make you think twice about what you eat and drink. In a study published in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania found that the brain of the chimpanzee, where the researchers had implanted electrodes, actually reacts more strongly to a variety of drugs than that of a monkey with electrode implants. The monkey’s brain is capable of responding in a way that is almost incomprehensible to the researchers.
Wow. That’s crazy. We’re really glad we don’t have this in our own bodies.
I have always felt that it was wrong to restrict the brain to only a limited number of basic functions. To me, these basic functions are what gives our bodies the ability to function, our minds the ability to be capable of reason. The ability to do things like speak, or think, or feel. When we restrict what we have in mind, we take away that ability. This is why I think that a person should never be restricted, ever, to just basic functions.