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Ben - [C/x]
@benersing
Help me and my wife settle a debate...
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@m-j-r
it's pretty difficult to argue that a 2 month old infant completely thinks, but let me try. there should be object tracking at short distance, sounds should startle, and aversion to open space (though again, that doesn't really sound like cognition). they're thinking helplessly.
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Ben - [C/x]
@benersing
All those items are just responses to external stimuli
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@m-j-r
right, and that might be reasonable, but I think it would be very difficult to invalidate qualia when helpless & handicapped. a person with locked-in syndrome is thinking by definition, but they're incapable of any indication of cognition. EEG can be measured in either case.
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@m-j-r
otoh, to further your point, I can't think of any memory where I didn't have long-distance perception (as far a room-sized environment), so intuitively I would agree that babies are too handicapped to completely think (at least enough for recall).
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Ben - [C/x]
@benersing
But a person with locked-in syndrome has presumably acquired language and uses that to formulate thoughts, no?
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