Eleanor
Diamond Member
I don't know why I stopped getting notifications for this thread! Now I have to go back and catch up.... But from this page:
Geek patrol, over and out.:geek:
There may be developmental windows, where if you don't develop a particular cognitive "trick" or capacity it will be hard to do later, (learning a language etc.) but there are not many areas where "rewiring" is not even a possibility. People used to think that you can't teach an old dog new tricks because the brain ceased to develop - but all the accumulating evidence points in the opposite direction - that we can and DO learn new tricks so long as we keep trying to.
And the thing about the dogs is wrong too.:D
I am a big fan of this book. And what I always find most fascinating is that people almost always use the metaphor of the monster far MORE accurately than they realized. Remember the monster is created by cobbling together parts of various corpses and then re-animating them and, instead of nurturing the newly awakened being, frightening him so badly he runs away. He is, in the story, quite a good soul - and wants a family and connections - but because of how he looks he is rejected. I've always been fascinated at the depth of the critique of our attitudes toward children, nature and culture and technology that Shelly captured in her fable.Frankenstein's monster.
Geek patrol, over and out.:geek:
Just to clarify - it will not attain the level of sophistication of beyond a 7 year old. But it is still quite plastic even after the major brain development has taken place. There is, after all, "one shot learning," where we acquire a new reflex after the first experience, provided that experience is sufficiently 'impactful." Also, while the "default" values of our responses may be set - it is possible to habituate and recondition various responses - which is why exposure therapy works.the subconscious mind cannot grow older than 7 years old
There may be developmental windows, where if you don't develop a particular cognitive "trick" or capacity it will be hard to do later, (learning a language etc.) but there are not many areas where "rewiring" is not even a possibility. People used to think that you can't teach an old dog new tricks because the brain ceased to develop - but all the accumulating evidence points in the opposite direction - that we can and DO learn new tricks so long as we keep trying to.
And the thing about the dogs is wrong too.:D