Repressed Memory in ancient literature:: Jul 24, 2006 But since the conversation here has roamed broadly, I wonder if this 18th century case . There also are reposited whatever Thoughts we have . Perhaps an expert on literature could explain that the themes literature .. R. Simlai delivered the following discourse: What does an embryo resemble http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=443814HOME | that wont happen.....too small...
No brain yet--no thoughts yet!
...but hypothetically, that would be awesome.
Embryo: Glub glub glub, man it smells in here. Boy, sure is warm though, I wonder what my father looks like? I wonder if I will have a father who does not abandon me when I'm born. Where did I learn to think and reason suddenly? Ah well, it cannot be helped. Oh God! That bright light at the end of this tunnel sure is blinding! What's that whirring sound? IT'S SUCKING ME IN! AHHHHHHH! *slurp* Where am I now? Oh, I must be dead. Hey, this isn't so bad, it's quite like it was before except less smelly...
multiply, divide, multiply, divide.....and so on
"Hey I'm digging this ... its warm ... dark (so I can lways sleep), I eat anytime I want ... This is a great life .... "
We would hear "please don't kill me."
Yowzer, what was that! What's an egg gotta do to get some piece and quiet around here?!
Oh 'ello, what's going on 'ere.....whoooooah...
Ello.
Ello.
You're me.
No, you're me.
Well that's just crazy....whooooooah...
Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello.
Getting crowded in here, innit?
So...we're all...like...the same?....whoooooah.
Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello.
Bored now!....whoooooahh!
Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello. Ello..... The wonders of being a baby in the womb - and before!:: Apr 26, 2005 We all know a healthy baby is a miracle, but have you really considered what . As the embryo grows and develops into a baby, many changes are also . Thoughts of consequence can sometimes arise from the most mundane .. lantern high so he could see while he helped the woman deliver the baby. http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=513422HOME |
And so on...I suspect we'd get bored of their monologue long before they did. Oh and to those who say an embryo would be thinking 'Please don't murder me" - please grow up. The correct, if slightly boring answer, is that that embryos are very unlikely to have thoughts until they have brains, and if we could listen to them, we wouldn't understand them, because they wouldn't be in any human language...
its not gonna think anything profound, or at all.
Scientific wonders of being alive:: Dec 11, 2004 If you could save all the times your eyes blink in one life time and use Your eyes saw even the embryo of me, and in your book all its parts were down in writing. The many thoughts of the VERY BEST "builder" we will ever know. Please read carefully the Google Answers Terms of Service. If http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=430077HOME | And I wonder if their tails wag when they're thinking happy ones?
Hahaha!
I am more curious about your reasons for asking this question than about the thoughts of an embryo. An embryo has only a few cells, and none have differentiated to any specific purpose. Brain cells have not yet come into being, much less organized to think thoughts.
Yet this embryo is everything that the human being will become. It has no face, yet the face will grow out of the embryonic cells. It has no brain, yet the brain will grow out of the embronic cells. The embryo is already a unique human being, even though it has not developed the ability to relate to me. I can relate to it, however, because I have developed the ability to love and nurture and serve others before myself. I can honor the image of God in an embryo just as surely as in a baby or an old man. I can respect God's creative act in an embryo just as surely as in a baby or an old person.
Nobody is ever born without first being an embryo. No human exists without starting as an embryo. The embryo is a human who has not yet had a thought, but we honor and respect the embryo for all that it will become. We dare not scorn the embryo, because this embryo may be the discoverer of the cure for cancer, or the composer of the most beautiful symphony of all time. We don't know what gifts God has given to this embryo, and the only way to find out is to nurture the embryo until birth and then rear the baby with love and wisdom.
If an embryo could think, it might think, "I can't wait to show you what God gave me!" I can't wait to see what this embryo will show me.
i would say you werent or never could read the thoughts of an embryo.
an embryo brain might not have sufficient structure to have thoughts.
ok, if there is a spirit connected to a fetus, then maybe you could read the spirits thoughts. but it can be argued that a spirit doesnt enter the body until first breath.
it can also be argured that reading the thoughts of spirits, if possible, can also mean reading the thoughts of a demon or a fallen angel. which might try to confuse the issues of life and abortion and psychic readings
"Wow....I have gill slits and a tail, but they're disappearing as I develop! Maybe I'm evolving!"
I am amazed that in this day and age of ultrasound etc that people are still calling a fetus a lump of cells. I don't think wee need to read the thoughts of an embryo, but we need to educate people that it does indeed have a face!
LOL Ok here is his thought.....cant wait to see you Mom...
everyone pray for me....my daughterinlaw is acting like a brat... Report Abuse
They have no life experience. You wouldn't learn anything.
"I hope Mommy doesn't murder me!"
"Wow I am growing and starting to be formed into life, I hope my mommy doesn't kill me"
that would be very interesting
we were all once embryos, so shouldn't we remember them?
It would not be much. Sound and awareness.
I'm not sure what exactly an embryo would think about -- it's not like they have a wide variety of experience...
An unborn human has absolutely no thought processes until about 26 weeks. After that I can't claim to know, but I seriously doubt it would be even remotely comprehensible.
A clump of cells has no thoughts.
Around about 20 weeks or so, the baby could have thoughts because it becomes viable.
At what stage?
For the first month or two this is like saying:
What if we could read the thoughts of someone's thigh muscle?
For the next few months this is like saying:
What if we could read the thoughts of someone's spine?
You would have to check with an pediatric neurologist but I suspect that up to birth you will not get coherent thoughts, just emotions.
Where was the last debate on wednesday with Mccain and Obama?
INSTANCE / WAITING FOR SPRING
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