cagerattler wrote:
For the first six months of life, the things infants do are controlled by the brainstem, not the cerebrum. Smiling, crying, feeding, and eye tracking are all controlled by the brainstem. This is known because when infants are born without a brain (just a brainstem) it is impossible to tell from their behavior until they reach the age of 6 months or so.
Born without a brain? I've heard stories about doctors having to reconstruct the skull and having problems because the brain was so big, etc... WOW, so you think all that is controlled by the most basic of neural functions? So how do people have comas, or go to sleep?
You sound as bad as my danish aunt. I SHOWED her how her dog has emotions, anticipates, plans, etc... yet she says the dog can't THINK! The hell it can't. It reacted the SAME way to the test that I have, and the same way ANY half way intelligent human does, and the same way all animals seem to. RIGHT DOWN to the look that means "OK, you are NOT fooling me! Throw the damn ball already!"! Just the fact that the dog didn't even flinch when I acted like I threw the ball, and looked at me that way(Though the first time he flinched and started to look), SCREAMS that he can't think.
Apparently, children are born with brains about 1/4th to 1/3rd their final size 25-33%! Yet the brain stem accounts for less than 2%!
http://cas-courses.buffalo.edu/classes/ ... ise4b.html