Thinking
I have been wondering. That’s thinking.
I found some answers. I read them and understood them. That’s thinking,
too.
Scientists don’t know exactly how people think. They do know that people
think with their brains. And they know some of the kinds of thinking
people do.
I remember. That’s thinking. I remember my last birthday. . . what I
learned in school last year . . . what time I must be home for dinner.
I can think about things that are just ideas. That’s another kind of
thinking. I know what the number 10 means. I know what loving my mother
and father means.
I decide about things. I look at two pictures I have made and I say,
“This one is better.” That’s thinking.
I plan and make things—a model, a puppet. I have to think to do that.
I wonder, remember, decide, plan, understand ideas. I think. And I do it
all with my brain.
The human brain weighs only about three pounds (1.5 kilograms). A
six-year- old child’s brain is as big as a gTown-up’s brain. The brain
isn’t large, but it’s important. I learn, remember, and think with my
brain.
An electronic “brain” is huge. A human brain is small. Yet an electronic
“brain” can’t do anything unless human brains help it.
I can think of different ways to show that I know what 10 means.