It's known that one hemisphere of the brain controls the opposing side of the body. It's also suggested that if you're more dominant with your dexterity on one side (say right-handed/left-handed, whatever) then your strengths will likely be that of the mastering cerebral hemisphere for that side. In theory, right-handed people tend to lean towards being logical, lefties more creative. Signs of initial hand preference show in as young as 9-month infants.
Now, my question is this: do you think our mental strengths are predetermined and become apparent as we advance physically with such things as our fine-motor skill development, or do you think it is through our physical development and overall experiences that we gain such mental strengths? Now, let's say a spinal cord injury is thrown in at an extremely young age forcing the individual to have a particular hand preference, when the child could/would have been otherwise been something different: do you think such could be a factor for sculpting later mental strengths?
(I don't want to hear about ambidextrous possibilities, the point still remains!)
Your 5-page essays are due by Monday. Chop-chop! Hahaha… haha… ha… no, seriously. ( ¬.ó ) <――That's a 'Mr. Serious, Frowny, One Eye's Squinty, «M'yah, see!?»' face? I don't know. I'm retarded; it happens.
Edited by Jennii, 10 November 2010 - 09:15 PM.





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