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by suddenlybananas
492 days ago
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That is simply not true. There are many cultures which greatly restrict infants' ability to move (e.g. traditional rural communities in Northern China or the Ache in Paraguay) and the children in these communities still learn how to walk. Not only that, but the basic neural mechanisms that are used in walking are innately specified (central pattern generators), not learnt (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S09594...). Now, there is a degree of "fine-tuning" that is learnt that makes the walking more fluent and precise, but the basic principles of walking are innate. One only needs to see a foal walking less than an hour after birth to be convinced of this. Part of the problem is that humans are born so premature that people confuse natural maturation with learning. Just as we don't learn puberty, we don't learn how to walk. |
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Did you read the paper you linked? It describes all the immense amount of learning that actually happens: https://art.torvergata.it/retrieve/e291c0d4-b584-cddb-e053-3...
> One only needs to see a foal walking less than an hour after birth to be convinced of this.
Have you actually seen a foal walking? They are very visibly learning how to do it!