Apr 15 2006 08:01:23 PM EDT

Can We Handle Change?

In the early evening last week, I want to a presentation by a Yale professor of psychiatry. It was about what he called “the neurobiological antagonism to difference” — all about how, after we reach a certain age (12, about the age of sexual maturity), our brains look at the world for confirmations of their perceptual frameworks, and so cope less well with “difference” — data that challenge our perceptions. In the comments period I said I thought this view was a little pessimistic — after all, don’t scientists, who learned all the old scientific theories first, come up with new and different theories? He allowed as how human beings probably have other means of adapting to new conditions. I think a complete theory would include an explanation of how it is, even though our brains lose the plasticity of early childhood, we can continue to learn new things and even adopt new world views into old age.

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