On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 20:12:43 +0100, David Longley
<David at longley.demon.co.uk> in comp.ai.philosophy wrote:
[. . .]
>>>Human brains are also remarkably like rat brains which is one of the
>>>reasons why most neuroscience research is done on rats. Because rats and
>>>dogs are macrosmatic most visual neuroscience is done on frogs, cats or
>>>small primates. The key point to appreciate is that there are remarkable
>>>homologies between all higher animals when it comes to central nervous
>>>system anatomy and function and this is true not just of the mammals.
>>>The environment has shaped these homologies and differences just as it
>>>continues to shape behaviour. One has to look to homologies in
>>>anatomical structure and environmental pressures to understand
>>>brain-behaviour relations.
>>>>So, we should look to homologies in brain structure between you and
>>rats to explain your behavior, David? If you say so.
>>>>Regards - Lester
>>Are you taking SSRIs?
I get my SSRI's the same place I get my URL's, David. Where do you get
yours?
Regards - Lester