How do babies not sense danger? Shouldn’t death be something hardwired into your brain from birth?

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How do they even learn the concept of danger? At what point does the brain go “hey If i do this we die” How does it learn that?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Babies do have some survival instincts, though rather basic. They have reflexes to hold their breath under water, or to try and brace themselves when falling. Sucking reflexes to feed. Turn their heads away from things coming at them and a bunch more.

They have eventual learned behaviors like “hey, that stove is hot. Do not touch.” either through experience or observed behavior. Notably, this can be missed in people who do not feel pain. [They will often burn themselves or bite their mouth since they lack the negative stimuli. ](https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/condition/congenital-insensitivity-to-pain/#:~:text=Congenital%20insensitivity%20to%20pain%20is,of%20their%20body%20when%20injured.).

There are also other natural phobia that people might not realize are survival instincts. Such as being afraid of the dark, since going out alone and away from the campfire was risky business. There are predators out there and they see better than humans.

Or fear of heights. Since flight, parachutes, and climbing gear are relatively new inventions.

Bugs since they’re unclean(rotting food) or can cause damage with toxins.

The tryptophobia(the one about the irregularly shaped holes in things, spelling is so off auto correct can’t help me right now) can be related to skin diseases or again, unclean rotting food.

There’s even a possibly coincidental overlap of peoples response to [low frequency sounds](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrasound) and geological events.

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