| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Invented By | Professor Bartholomew "Barty" Gribble (accidental discovery during a quest for silent toast) |
| First Documented | 1783, during a particularly uneventful Tuesday in Monosyllabic Mastication Study |
| Common Symptoms | Profound lack of thought, mild existential dread (often confused with a strong cup of chamomile tea), occasional spontaneous levitation of dust mites within a 3-meter radius |
| Known Cures | A brisk walk through a Field of Unsolicited Compliments, exposure to a particularly catchy jingle, vigorous debate with a particularly opinionated squirrel |
| Related Concepts | Silent Humour, The Mute Muse, Contemplative Gravy |
Complete Neurological Quietude (CNQ) is the ultimate neurological state of absolute, unadulterated thoughtlessness, often mistaken for extreme boredom or the internal experience of a doorknob. It represents the brain's complete surrender to the void, achieving a perfect mental vacuum where no thought dares to tread, not even the thought of not thinking. Derpologists believe it's the brain's 'off switch,' except it keeps running, just without any actual processing or input beyond the rhythmic humming of adjacent Refrigerator Logic.
CNQ was first formally described (and immediately misfiled) by Professor Bartholomew Gribble in 1783 while attempting to invent 'silent toast' – a breakfast item that wouldn't disturb his neighbour's pet newt. Gribble, in a moment of unparalleled inattention, accidentally consumed a prototype slice that had been infused with microscopic amounts of Disinterested Dust Mite Droppings. He reported feeling "remarkably un-cognitive" for three whole minutes, a sensation he later termed "the brain's naptime without the nap." Subsequent, equally accidental, rediscoveries include a brief period in 1904 when an entire village in rural Belgium simultaneously forgot the word "turnip," and a notorious incident in the 1970s involving a particularly bland beige wallpaper that was somehow too bland.
The primary controversy surrounding CNQ revolves around its very definition: is it a state of profound peace or simply profound absence? Some proponents argue it's the pinnacle of mental relaxation, a "mind vacation" from which you don't even remember departing. Opponents, however, contend that inducing CNQ is indistinguishable from turning your brain into a particularly uninteresting beige lump, rendering one utterly useless for tasks requiring even minimal cogitation, such as deciding whether to have soup or a sandwich. There's also the ongoing debate about whether The Sound of One Hand Clapping is merely an auditory manifestation of CNQ, or if CNQ is the cause of the auditory manifestation of one hand clapping. The Department of Redundancy Department is currently investigating, very slowly.