The meaning of life is in your baby’s brain
MARK SLOAN
Times Colonist
16 Aug 2009
Six-month-old babies are the happiest people on the planet. I look forward to seeing them every day in my pediatric practice.
I’ve often wondered, peering into those wide, unblinking eyes, just what it’s like to be a baby. Now, thanks to Alison Gopnik’s fascinating new book, The Philosophical Baby: What Children’s Minds Tell Us About Truth, Love, and the Meaning of Life, I have a pretty good idea.
Baby brains are different from those of adults. The prefrontal cortex — the centre of such “adult” activities as thinking, planning and inhibiting thoughts that distract us from the task at hand — is much less developed, for example. As a result, babies are more impulsive, less wired for inhibition and, Gopnik suggests, “aware of much more, much more intensely, than we are.”