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- <html>
- <head>
- <title>
- Intuitive knowledge and its development
- </title>
- </head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Intuitive knowledge and its development
- </h1>
-
- <p></p>
- <p>
- <strong>Understanding consciousness is necessary for understanding life. Variations of consciousness, such
- as dementia, depression, delusion, or insight, originality, curiosity have to be understood
- biologically.
- </strong>
- <strong> </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- To understand our ability to know and discover, I think it's valuable to consider foolishness along with
- wisdom, since "knowledge" consists of both. Scientists have been notorious for opposing new discoveries, but
- the mental rigidity of old age is so general, and well known, that many people have believed that it was
- caused by the death of brain cells. Individual cells do tend to become less adaptive with aging, and
- metabolism generally slows down with aging, but even relatively young and mentally quick people are
- susceptible to losing their ability to understand new ideas.
- </p>
- <p>
- I think our use of language is both the means by which understanding can be preserved, encapsulated, and
- disseminated, and a great impediment to understanding. At first, words are continuous with the intuitive
- framework in which they are learned, but they gradually become relatively independent and abstract. Things
- can be learned without directly experiencing them. Even though words gradually change through use, the
- simple fact that they have a degree of dependability allows them to function even when there is no active
- thought. Uncritical listening is possible, and if a person can say something, it seems to be easy to believe
- that it's true. By the age of 25, our language has usually given us many assumptions about the nature of the
- world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Verbal formulations of one sort are given up for new verbal formulations, in the process called education.
- Sometimes graduate students seem to have lost all common sense. It's as if their hard-drive had been
- reformatted to allow their professors to download onto it. But common sense, usually, is just what Einstein
- called it, an accumulation of prejudices.
- </p>
- <p>
- Children learn language so easily that many people have seriously believed that a certain language was
- inherited by people of each ethnic group. Bilingual people were thought to be intellectually inferior
- (though it turned out that bilingualism actually increases a person's mental abilities--possibly because of
- the brain development known to be produced by learning1.) Eventually, people learned that the children of
- immigrants were as capable of learning the language of the new country as the native children were.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, explaining the mystery of language learning took a new form, that didn't seem foolish to most
- professional anthropologists and linguists. The first and most important step in the new theory was to
- declare that simple learning theory was inadequate to explain the development of language. Language
- developed, just as the silly racial theory had thought, out of our genetic endowment, except that what we
- inherited was now said to be a Universal Language, with its Universal Rules embedded in our chromosomes.
- Then, the speed with which children learn language was to be explained as the "innateness" of all of the
- complex stuff of language, with only a few things needing to be actually learned--those minor details that
- distinguish English from Eskimo or Zapotec.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Although the phrase "genetic epistemology" was coined by Jean Piaget, a major philosophical and scientific
- theme of the 20th century has been the idea that the "forms" of knowledge, for perceiving space, or logical
- relations, or language patterns, are derived from our genes, and that they are somehow built into the
- arrangement of our brain cells so that we spontaneously think in certain ways, and don't have the capacity
- to transcend the nature of our inherited brain. In that view, children have their own pre-logical way of
- thinking, and their thought (and language development) must proceed through certain stages, each governed by
- some "structural" process in the nervous system. The only thing wrong with the idea of innate knowledge is
- that people use it to tell us what we can't know, in other words, to rationalize stupidity. Of course, they
- wouldn't like to phrase it that way, because they consider their "genetic epistemology of symbolic forms" to
- be the essence and the totality of intelligence, and that people who allow their thoughts to be structured
- entirely by experience are just confused.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Years ago, I had been criticizing Noam Chomsky's theory of language so much, that I thought I might have
- misjudged or inappropriately depreciated his general attitude toward consciousness, so I asked him some
- questions about the intelligence of animals. His response confirmed my view that he subscribed to the most
- extreme form of "genetic epistemology":
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't know whether there is a common animal ability to manipulate images and generalize. In fact, I doubt
- it very much. Thus the kind of "generalization" that leads to knowledge of lanugage from sensory experience
- seems to me to involve principles such as those of universal grammar as an innate property, for reasons I
- have explained elsewhere, and I see no reason to believe that these principles underlie generalization in
- other animals. Nor do I think that the kinds of generalization that lead a bird to gain knowledge of how to
- build a nest, or to sing its song, or to orient itself spatially, are necessarily part of the human ability
- to generalize."
- </p>
- <p>
- All of the textbooks that I have seen that discuss the issue of animal intelligence have taken a position
- like that of Chomsky--that any knowledge animals have is either rigidly instinctual, or else is just a set
- of movements that have been mechanically learned. In other words, there isn't anything intelligent about the
- complex things that animals may do. Konrad Lorenz and the ethologists explained animal behavior in terms of
- chains of reflexes that are "triggered" by certain sensations or perceptions. This claim that animals'
- behavior just consists of mechanical chains of reflexes strictly follows Descartes' doctrine, and Chomsky
- has consistently acknowledged that his theory is Cartesian. The claim that children have their own
- non-logical way of understanding things is very similar to the doctrine about animals, in the way it limits
- real rational understanding to adult human beings.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The awareness of young animals is particularly impressive to me, because we know the short time they have
- had in which to learn about the world. Any instance in which a young animal understands a completely novel
- situation, in a way that is fully adequate and workable, demonstrates that it is capable of intellectual
- generalization.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond that, I think animal inventiveness can teach us about our own capacity for inventiveness, which both
- the genetic and the behaviorist theories of knowledge totally fail to explain.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spiders that build architecturally beautiful webs have been favorite subjects for theorizing about the
- instinctive mechanisms of behavior. When spiders were sent up on an orbiting satellite, they were in a
- situation that spiders had never experienced before. Spiders have always taken advantage of gravity for
- building their webs, and at first, the orbiting spiders made strange little muddled arrangements of
- filaments, but after just a few attempts, they were able to build exactly the same sort of elegant
- structures that spiders normally build. (My interpretation of that was that spiders may be more intelligent
- than most neurobiologists.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Nesting birds often swoop at people or animals who get too close to their nest. Early last summer, I had
- noticed some blue jays that seemed to be acting defensive whenever I went into one part of the yard. On a
- very hot day at the end of summer, a couple of plump jays were squawking and apparently trying to get my
- attention while I was watering the front yard, and I idly wondered why they would be acting that way so late
- in the year. I had gone around the house to water things in the back yard, and the birds came over the
- house, and were still squawking, and trying to get my attention. I realized that their excitement didn't
- have anything to do with their nest, and looking more carefully, I saw that they were young birds. As it
- dawned on me that they were interested in the water squirting out of the hose, I aimed the stream up towards
- them, and they got as close to it as they could. Since the force of the stream might have hurt them, I put
- on a nozzle that made a finer spray, and the birds immediately came down to the lowest tip of the branch,
- where they could get the full force of the mist, holding out their wings, and leaning into the spray so that
- it ruffled their breast feathers. Their persistence had finally paid off when they got me to understand what
- they wanted, and they were enjoying the cool water. As new young birds, I don't know how they understood
- hoses and squirting water, but it was clear that they recognized me as a potentially intelligent being with
- whom they could communicate.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a person, that wouldn't have seemed like a tremendously inventive response to the hot weather, but for
- young birds that hadn't been out of the nest for long, it made it clear to me that there is more inventive
- intelligence in the world than is apparent to most academic psychologists and ethologists.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Early porpoise researchers were surprised when a porpoise understood a sequence in which one tone was
- followed by two, and then by three, and answered by producing a series of four tones. The porpoise had
- discovered that people knew how to count.
- </p>
- <p>
- Experiments with bees show the same sort of understanding of numbers and intentions. An experimenter set out
- dishes of honey in a sequence, doubling the distance each time. After the first three dishes had been found
- by scouts, the bees showed up at the fourth location before the honey arrived, extrapolating from the
- experimenter's previous behavior and inferring his intentions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once I noticed that an ant seemed to be dozing at the base of every maple leaf, and that there were several
- aphids on each leaf. I was getting very close, trying to understand why the ant was sitting so quietly.
- Apparently my odor gave the ant a start, and he leaped into activity, racing up the leaf, and giving each
- aphid a tap as he passed. When he had reached the end of the leaf and had touched every aphid, his agitation
- suddenly disappeared, and he returned to his spot at the base of the leaf. Although I knew that ants could
- count very well, as demonstrated by experiments in which an ant had to describe a complex route to a dish of
- honey, it was the apparent emotion that interested me. It reminded me of the hostess who counted her dishes
- before the guests left.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the brains of such different kinds of animal work in such similar ways, in situations that contain many
- new components, I don't think it's possible to conclude anything except that intelligence is a common
- property of animals, and that it comprises "generalization" and much more. It's obvious that they grasp the
- situation in a realistic way. The situation has structured their awareness. Some people might say that they
- have "modeled the situation in their mind," but it's enough to say that they understand what's going on.
- With that understanding, motivations and intentions form part of the perception, since the situation is a
- developing process. Ordinarily, we say that we "infer" motivations and intentions and "deduce" probable
- outcomes, but that implies that the situation is static, rather than continuous with its origin and outcome.
- In reality, these understandings and expectations are part of the direct perception. It isn't a matter of
- "intelligence" operating upon "sensations," but of intelligence inhering in the grasping of the situation.
- (In Latin, <strong><em>intelligo</em></strong>
- meant "I perceive." I suspect that a Roman might have perceived the word <strong><em>intelligens</em
- ></strong> as being derived from roots such as <strong><em>tele</em></strong>--from Greek, or <strong
- >tela,</strong> web, warp thread--and <strong><em>
- ligo or lego</em></strong>, connoting the binding in or gathering of what is distant or extended.)
- </p>
- <p>
- This view of a generalized animal intelligence wouldn't seem strange, except that the history of official
- western philosophy, the doctrine of genetic determinism in biology, and the habits that form with the rigid
- uses of language, have offered another way of looking at it. The simple intelligence of an animal would
- disrupt all of that important stuff, so it has become mandatory to dismiss all examples of intelligent
- behavior by animals as "mere anthropomorphizing." Sadly, this has also meant that most intelligent behavior
- by humans has also been dismissed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cellular development of an organism used to be described as a process in which everything is
- predetermined by the genes, but the interactions between an embryo and its environment are now known to be
- crucial in shaping the process of maturation, so that the real organism (the phenotype) doesn't necessarily
- reflect its genetic make-up (genotype); the term "phenocopy" acknowledges this process.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- London taxi drivers were recently found to have an enlargement of part of the hippocampus, compared to the
- brains of other people, and the difference was greater, in proportion to the time they had been driving
- taxis. Their brains have been shaped by their activities.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the brain's cellular anatomy is so radically affected by activity even in adulthood, then the concept of
- awareness as a process in which consciousness takes its form from the situation shouldn't be problematic. If
- a bee and a porpoise can draw similar conclusions from similar experiences, then the world is being grasped
- by both in an objective way.
- </p>
- <p>
- The environment shapes the organism's response, and the momentary response contributes to the development of
- the supporting processes and apparatuses. So the ability to respond is the basic question. If the richly
- grasped situation contains its own implications, there is no need for explaining the ability to perceive
- those implications in terms of some prearranged neurological code, except for the ability to respond
- complexly and appropriately. Any specific interpretation or behavior which is predetermined is going to
- function as an impediment to understanding. Verbal formulations often have the function of creating a
- stereotyped and inappropriate response.
- </p>
- <p>
- The "genetic epistemologists" confuse their own verbal interpretations with the real ways that understanding
- develops, and when a child doesn't yet know all of the connotations of a specific word, the psychologist
- ascribes a pre-logical brain function to the child.3 The similar failure to perceive and to communicate
- accounts for the foolish things ethologists have said about animal intelligence.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The process in which an organism responds to a situation is continuous with the process of communication.
- The organism understands that in certain situations a response can be elicited, and so it acts accordingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Communication is a response that is directed toward eliciting a response from another. The idea that an
- animal might have an intention, or a desire to communicate or respond, has been obsessively denied by most
- official western philosophers, who see that as a uniquely human quality, but some philosophers have even
- denied that quality to humans. For them, consciousness is a passive receptacle for units of meaning and
- logic, like a mail bin at the post-office, where letters are received, sorted, and distributed. Maybe
- computers work that way, but there is nothing in living substance that works like that.
- </p>
- <p>
- Consciousness is participation, in the sense that there is a response of an organism to events. Even dreams
- and hallucinations have their implied reference to something real.
- </p>
- <p>
- If a violin has been soaked in water, it will sound very odd when it's played. Its various parts won't
- resonate properly. Similarly, the living substance has to be in a particular state to resonate properly with
- its environment.
- </p>
- <p>
- People have proposed that visual experience involves the luminescence of nerves in the optical system.
- Presumably, similar analogs of events could occur in various tissues when we are conscious of sounds,
- tastes, smells, etc. But whether or not our auditory nerves are singing when we experience music, no one
- questions the existence of some sort of responsive activity when we are being conscious of something.
- Activating certain brain areas will make us conscious of certain things, and that activation can be a
- response to sensory nerve impulses, or to brain chemicals produced in dreaming or drug-induced
- hallucinations, or to electrical stimulation, or to the act of remembering.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The history of the prefrontal leukotomy or lobotomy, in which undesirable behaviors were surgically removed,
- was closely associated with the development of surgical treatments for epilepsy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Natalya Bekhtereva was exploring alternative treatments for epilepsy, implanting fine wire electrodes into
- the abnormal parts of the brain, and surrounding areas, to discover the nature of the electrical events that
- were associated with the seizures. In the process, she discovered that meanings and intentions corresponded
- to particular electrical patterns. She found that giving certain kinds of stimulation to healthy parts of
- the brain could stimulate the development of ways of functioning that by-passed the seizure-prone parts of
- the brain. Extending this, seeing that creating new patterns of nervous activity could overcome sickness,
- she proposed that creativity, the activation of the brain in new ways, would itself be therapeutic. Some
- people, such as Stanislav Grof, advocated the therapeutic use of LSD with a rationale that seems similar,
- for example to overcome chronic pain by changing its meaning, putting it into a different relation to the
- rest of experience. "In general, psychedelic therapy seems to be most effective in the treatment of
- alcoholics, narcotic-drug addicts, depressed patients, and individuals dying of cancer." 2 Since LSD shifts
- the balance away from serotonin dominance toward dopamine dominance, its effect can be to erase the habits
- of learned helplessness. Stress and pain also leave their residue in the endorphin system, and the
- anti-opiates such as naloxone can relieve depression, improve memory, and restore disturbed pituitary
- functions, for example leading to the restoration of menstrual rhythms interrupted by stress or aging. The
- amazing speed with which young animals can solve problems is undoubtedly a reflection of their metabolic
- vigor, and it is probably partly because they haven't yet experienced the paralysis that can result from
- repeated or prolonged and inescapable stress. Many of the factors responsible for the metabolic intensity of
- youth can be used therapeutically, even after dullness has developed. The right balance of amino acids and
- carbohydrates, and the avoidance of the antimetabolic unsaturated fatty acids, can make a great difference
- in mental functioning, even though we still don't know what the ideal formulas are.
- </p>
- <p>
- While chemical -- nutritional -- hormonal approaches can help to restore creativity, the work of people like
- Bekhtereva shows that the exercise of creativity can help to restore biochemical and physiological systems
- to more normal functioning. Learning new general principles or new languages can be creatively restorative.
- </p>
- <p><h3>NOTES AND REFERENCES</h3></p>
-
- <p>
- 1. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2000 Apr 11;97(8):4398-403. Navigation-related structural change in the
- hippocampi of taxi drivers. Maguire EA, Gadian DG, Johnsrude IS, Good CD, Ashburner J, Frackowiak RS, Frith
- CD. Structural MRIs of the brains of humans with extensive navigation experience, licensed London taxi
- drivers, were analyzed and compared with those of control subjects who did not drive taxis. The posterior
- hippocampi of taxi drivers were significantly larger relative to those of control subjects. A more anterior
- hippocampal region was larger in control subjects than in taxi drivers. Hippocampal volume correlated with
- the amount of time spent as a taxi driver (positively in the posterior and negatively in the anterior
- hippocampus). These data are in accordance with the idea that the posterior hippocampus stores a spatial
- representation of the environment and can expand regionally to accommodate elaboration of this
- representation in people with a high dependence on navigational skills. It seems that there is a capacity
- for local plastic change in the structure of the healthy adult human brain in response to environmental
- demands.
- </p>
- <p>
- 2. ("History of LSD Therapy," Stanislav Grof, M.D. Chapter 1 of LSD Psychotherapy, "1980, 1994 by Stanislav
- Grof. Hunter House Publishers, Alameda, California, ISBN 0-89793-158-0).
- </p>
- <p>
- 3. There is an example of this argument about the nature of reasoning in New Scientist magazine, December 9,
- 2000. P. Johnson-Laird found that more than 99% of Princeton University students were unable to solve a
- logical puzzle correctly. Ira Noveck of the Claude Bernard University in Lyon believes this may result
- simply from people's difficulty interpreting the language of the puzzles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Cheloveka 2000 Mar-Apr;26(2):5-9 [The cerebral organization of creativity. I. The development of a
- psychological test]. Starchenko MG, Vorob'ev VA, Kliucharev VA, Bekhtereva NP, Medevedev SV.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Fiziol Cheloveka 1998 Jul-Aug;24(4):55-63 [Brain processing of visually presented verbal stimuli at
- different levels of their integration. II. The orthographic and syntactic aspects]. Vorob'ev VA, Korotkov
- AD, Pakhomov SV, Rozhdestvenskii DG, Rudas MS, Bekhtereva NP, Medvedev SV.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurosci Behav Physiol 1986 Jul-Aug; 16(4):333-9 The systemic approach to the stability and plasticity of
- neurophysiological processes during adaptive brain activity. Vasilevskii VN The problem of the stability and
- adaptability of regulatory processes is considered, taking as a point of departure N. P. Bekhtereva's theory
- regarding stable pathological states, and inflexible and adaptable links in control systems. The need to
- introduce a probabilistic approach is emphasized. Generalizations are made on materials relating to the
- connectability of the separate components of the biorhythms of functional systems, and to the stability of
- their amplitude-frequency characteristics. The corpus of facts permitted the successful development in
- clinical practice of functional biocontrol and feedback.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurosci Behav Physiol 1986 Jul-Aug; 16(4):322-33. A study of the connectedness among distant neuronal
- populations in the human brain during mental activity. Bekhtereva NP, Medvedev SV, Krol EM In this article,
- we present the results of a study of connectedness among distant neuronal populations in human deep-brain
- structures. The time characteristics involved and the stability of the connections between different
- neuronal populations during monotonous mental activity are discussed. We show that a stable connectedness
- does correlate with mental activity; however, the connections themselves do not correlate with one another.
- We also show that the individual connections, the elements of the system which make mental activity
- possible, can function with various degrees of rigidity or flexibility.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 1986;289(5):1276-80 [Physiologic role of changes in the human neuron discharge rate
- during a single mental act]. Bekhtereva NP, Gogolitsyn IuL, Pakhomov SV.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Dokl Akad Nauk SSSR 1985;285(5):1233-5 [Neurons-detectors of errors in subcortical structures of human
- brain]. Bekhtereva NP, Kropotov IuD, Ponomarev VA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neurosci Behav Physiol 1985 Jan-Feb;15(1):27-32 Bioelectrical correlates of protective mechanisms of the
- brain. Bekhtereva NP.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1984 Aug;70(8):1092-9 [Neurochemical aspects of therapeutic electric
- stimulation]. Bekhtereva NP, Dambinova SA, Gurchin FA, Smirnov VM, Korol'kov AV. Comparative analysis of the
- CSF and blood protein-peptide composition in Parkinsonian patients performed with the aid of indwelled
- electrodes prior to and after therapeutic electrical stimulation (TES) of the brain subcortical structures,
- revealed a therapeutic effect in the form of reduced muscular rigidity and a mental activation with a
- positive emotional response. After the TES the protein content in the biological fluids tended to become
- normalized and the the range of low-molecular protein-peptide fractions changed. A high-performance liquid
- chromatography, bidimensional electrophoresis and thin-layer chromatography revealed about 5-6 factors of
- peptide nature with the molecular mass less than 5000 daltons in the CSF and blood after the TES. These
- factors were shown to exert a biological effect upon muscle preparation of the leech.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1984 Jul;70(7):892-903 [Relationships of distantly located neuronal
- populations in the human brain in the realization of the thinking process]. Bekhtereva NP, Medvedev SV,
- Krol' EM The time characteristics of the interneuronal connections as well as interrelationships among
- distant neuronal populations of the human brain deep structures were studied during monotonous mental
- activity. It was shown that stable interrelationships could be considered as a correlate of mental activity
- though the connections themselves were not of the correlative nature. These connections, being the elements
- of the activity--maintaining system, could be of various degree of rigidity.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1984 Jul;70(7):881-91 [Reflection of the semantic characteristics of the
- thinking process in the impulse activity of neurons]. Bekhtereva NP The paper deals with the progress in
- research into the problem of reflection of semantic characteristics of psychological tests in impulse
- activity of neurons and neuronal assemblies. The high dynamicity of brain correlates of thinking in most
- brain zones is stressed. Advantages and limits of different technical approaches as well as the most urgent
- tasks to be solved are discussed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1984 Jul;70(7):1071-5 [Natal'ia Petrovna Bekhtereva]. Iliukhina VA Biography
- </p>
- <p>
- Hum Physiol 1982 Sep-Oct;8(5):303-16 Cerebral organization of emotional reactions and states. Bekhtereva NP,
- Kambarova DK, Ivanov GG
- </p>
- <p>
- Zh Nevropatol Psikhiatr Im S S Korsakova 1980;80(8):1127-33 [Bioelectric correlates of the brain's
- protective mechanisms]. Bekhtereva NP The author substantiates the necessity of searching for new means
- producing a therapeutic effect on the brain of epileptic patients that would be similar, in principle, to
- the brain's own protective mechanisms. This can be done, in the author's opinion, on the basis of studying
- the most probable bioelectric equivalents of the protective mechanisms. The author suggests a new method for
- suppressing the epileptogenic focus. This suppression, close to the physiological one, is effected by
- applying a weak sinusoidal current to the focus via intracerebrally implanted electrodes. Data on the
- suppression of the epileptiform activity within the zone of the current application, as well as data
- confirming the local character of the current action are presented. The place of the new method in the
- system of complex therapy, particularly of epilepsy, is determined with consideration of the role of the
- stable pathological state. Probable neurophysiological mechanisms of the sinusoidal current action on the
- epileptogenic focus are discussed.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Vestn Akad Med Nauk SSSR 1979;(7):30-7 [Potentials of neurophysiology in the study of a resistant
- pathological state]. Bekhtereva NP
- </p>
- <p>
- Act Nerv Super (Praha) 1976;18(3):157-67 The neurophysiological code of simplest mental processes in man.
- Bekhtereva NP
- </p>
- <p>
- Vestn Akad Med Nauk SSSR 1975;(8):8-19 [Cerebral organization of human emotions]. Bekhtereva NP, Smirnov VM
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1973 Dec;59(12):1785-802 [Principles of the organization of the structure of
- the space-time code of short-term verbal memory]. Bekhtereva NP, Bundzen PV, Kaidel VD, David EE.
- </p>
- <p>
- Vopr Neirokhir 1972 Jan-Feb;36(1):7-12 [Therapeutic electric stimulation of deep brain structures].
- Bekhtereva NP, Bondarchuk AN, Smirnov VM, Meliucheva LA
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Vestn Akad Med Nauk SSSR 1972;27(9):43-9 [Principles of functional organization of the human brain].
- [Article in Russian] Bekhtereva NP.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova 1971 Dec;57(12):1745-61 [Functional reorganization of the activity of human
- brain neuron populations during short-term verbal memory]. Bekhtereva NP, Bundzen PV, Matveev IuK,
- Kaplunovskii AS
- </p>
- <p>
- From a biography by the Archives Jean Piaget: "His researches in developmental psychology and genetic
- epistemology had one unique goal: how does knowledge grow? His answer is that the growth of knowledge is a
- progressive construction of logically embedded structures superseding one another by a process of inclusion
- of lower less powerful logical means into higher and more powerful ones up to adulthood. Therefore,
- children's logic and modes of thinking are initially entirely different from those of adults."
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- © Ray Peat Ph.D. 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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