But the fact that if you pick up in infant, its legs will move in a walking pattern even though they can't support the infant's weight yet, is quite a lot like a deer running 20 minutes after it's born.
Yes but that also explain why the term 'instinct' is too vague to be useful. When do they start to do that? Is it really that coordinated, I think you will find that first they go to the hands and mouth.
yes there are neurological pathways being laid down along the enzyme gradients, all the time in neurological development. But an ungulate can walk in 20 minutes, a human infant in nine months, so if there is a similar process, it is very dilute. Humans may have reflexes to promote fuzzy learning of walking but not to the same order, much less degree.
My main issue is that there really are hardwired behaviors in many other animals that really are controlling these set behaviors of most members of the population, MAPs. male cats will almost always tend to express certain patterns of behavior, even if they are cut and have less testosterone.
But in humans there are none that we can see, the brain undergoes such explosive growth and has so many connections and patterns made through association, that there just isn't good evidence for hardwiring of specific behaviors. Most of the ‘programming’ seems to be associative and learned over time, now there is some heavy front loading in things like visual processing.
Now as I said I believe that biology is important, as someone who lives with major depression and OCD, I know how very important. But I think that humans have more general traits focused on general skills as opposed to hardwired traits based upon specific behaviors.
I believe very strongly that there is a biological component in language acquisition, as a general trait, when they show deep syntax in the brain, I will believe that. Right now I don't. And almost all children can learn to play a musical instrument if they are taught at the same time that language acquisition occurs, almost all of them. But I don't believe musical instrument behavior is a trait that was selected for.
I believe especially that there are specific windows of bonding when it comes to sexual attraction, but I do not believe that humans have mating behaviors like the tippy toe walk of male cats.
I am open to changing my beliefs, but so far most of the research on things like 'fear of snakes' is poorly controlled. Phobias are a whole other area of investigation the main phobia that people have is 'social anxiety disorder' and I do not see how that would be a beneficial 'fear' traits.
I am open to the ideas, I would just like better demonstration, so far most of them could be accounted for by a more general trait than a specific trait.