To protect it from damage.
You can not see your brain as it is enclosed by the skull.
Because you live much longer when the brain is shielded from damage.
The brain is soft tissue enclosed in hard bone, the skull. When the head is hit with force, it cuases the brain to hit the skull causing a "bruise' or concussion.
Because there is no-where for the extra swelling to go - since the brain is completely enclosed by a solid skull, any swelling of the tissue causes an increase in the pressure of the surrounding fluid, which causes damage to the brain.
Unless you're half way through open brain surgery - no. Your skull is still an enclosed cavity and won't let your brain escape regardless of speed.
Sinus.
The brain
The skull protects the brain.
The brain is on the inside the skull.
No, the skull is not proximal to the brain; rather, it encases and protects the brain. In anatomical terms, "proximal" refers to being closer to the point of attachment or origin, while the skull is external to the brain. Therefore, the brain is considered to be inside the skull, making the skull distal to the brain in this context.
If you are a human, then your brain is inside your cranium, or skull.
all of them, the brain is inside the skull