I was reading this article about babies and what they know and how they learn:
It got me to wondering. These babies are doing sophisticated reasoning, yet they don't appear to have a sense of self, or of being self-aware. I tried thinking back to my early memories which, I assume, would be those of a self-aware person. I recall being held by my mother while I was still wearing diapers as she stood next to a white picket fence talking to a lady standing on the other side. I estimate that I was 18 months old. When I was 3 or so I recall singing "pop goes the weasel" while I and a group of my equally young friends danced around a goose-berry bush, as our parents did their thing inside our house.
My grandson Christian was about 2 years old. In the doctors office he was getting a check up. While standing on a chair he glanced out the window and said "I want to eat at taco-bell!". He said he remembers that event. (And yes, he is as sharp as a tack!)
Over the past two decades, scientists have shown that babies only a few months old have a solid grasp on basic rules of the physical world. They understand that objects can't wink in and out of existence, and that objects can't "teleport" from one spot to another.
My grandson Christian was about 2 years old. In the doctors office he was getting a check up. While standing on a chair he glanced out the window and said "I want to eat at taco-bell!". He said he remembers that event. (And yes, he is as sharp as a tack!)
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