I feel horrible for Gua, imagine growing up with a loving family and then out of nowhere they abandon you but you don't understand why. Gua didn't know she was just part of an experiment, this was her family. Of course Donald was also a victim, but he at least got to stay with his parents.
I Googled; Gua reportedly died less than a year after being returned to the primate center. The reported cause of death was pneumonia, but I wonder if psychological factors played a role in her death. Was she ever able to reintergrate with the group? Did her mother remember her, and re-bond with her? Her short life was so full of trauma.
@äpplet 1234 Exactly, it kills me how people don´t stop to think that, life out on the wild is way way harder than in human society where you don´t have to worry about being prey, about diseases, about being out in the cold or having to fight for food, it is crucial for an animal to learn how to adapt to the environment at a young age. (i know that this isn´t the case for all humans, there are people that still have to worry about all of that, but i´m referring to people like the ones conducting the experiment).
I wonder how this kid felt about all of this, when somebody told him. To learn that your parents didn't experiment only on an animal but also on their own son. What kind of an ever lasting effect did this experiment had on their own son?
Neglected and/or badly treated kids tend to recover well if they are adopted before the age of 3, so if not taking into account the parent-child relationship this family might have, he probably turned out normal. Kids tend to "be brainwashed" by whatever the parents tell them, so if they phrased it correctly he might not mind, very few people have memories of being under 4 years old, so really doubt he can remember Gua. If he really took his life a few years after his parents passed away, they must have been very important to him?
@@Frost_Phantasm Or that he didn't know how to live without them around. (Children from controlling homes often feel this way as they were never allowed to do anything on their own.)
I wonder if they used an older child (maybe 2 years old?) and a younger monkey they might have gotten results closer to what they wanted. The problem was the baby wasn’t a full human yet and hadn’t learned enough human behaviors and the monkey was too old and had learned too many monkey behaviors
@@kimberlyrichardson5943 ya but if the experiment goes wrong are they just supposed to keep and animal for the rest of its life that could be potentially dangerous? (chimps aren't known for being the nicest animals)
You got a point there. The Out come would be different. And older child age 2 can talk and has learned more and a baby monkey. The monkey would have human behavior. Thank you Millie🤔
@@samuel-rw3xt In such a pursuit, it would be considered a "necessary evil." Cruelty to people and animals tells us about their limitations and capabilities.
You could get the same study without the trauma. Im sure he wasn't the first baby with a chimp in the house. imho, the parents were terrible and failed to integrate the chimp and the child as family members, looking at them more like subjects. This could have had a happier ending. I don't think the parents effectively communicated with the son either, which is a huge part of human development.
@@brad885 you may have a point for this case, but I'm addressing the idea of unethical experimentation as a whole. How would we know how people act under extreme stress? How would we know the absolute limitations of our bodies? Where does that info come from, and how is it verifiable?
@Adanaf Feyssa That was Gua, the chimpanzee who died of pneumonia aged 3. Their son Donald took his own life at age 43. A heartbreaking end for both of them.
I adopted a puppy, and at 1 year old he spoke a heartfelt speech at university graduation day, At 2 years old he became a cyber security specialist, pay my house mortgage, celebrated father's day with me, intros his girlfriend to me.
I’ve actually watched a different video covering the same topic in the past. This is pretty horrible and sad for the baby as he, with a monkey for 270 days adapted the monkey’s behavior and he can’t act like a regular human being
Have you heard of the language experiment done on a young male orangutan? He was able to get simple words like Koko, and was very social with the researchers and grad students at the university where he lived. The grad students would take him out for icecream as a treat sometimes and people usually thought it was cute until he started getting bigger and accidentally hurt someone. Because of this incident they had to stop their studies and he was sent to a nearby zoo. The saddest part is that the researchers would go to the zoo to check in on him and see how he was doing, but he wasn’t able to socialize with the other orangutans, and would communicate things akin to “why am I in here with these animals, take me home” (that’s a translation by his researchers, no apes have been able to string together full sentences, even after being taught words)
Great video, and very ethically questionable experiment but it's still interesting to learn about it. Just my honest opinion, I'd like to see more of Brew, because I feel some lines like "we need to keep eye on the crows" work best with Brew expression because that'd honestly be hilarious! xD
@@MichaelSHartman glad that you agree too :] I am assuming the team were just experimenting with video styles but it's good to tell them what you think about it too.
My youngest niece just turned a year old, and she’s in the babbling gibberish stage of talking. It’s hilarious to watch and listen to her “tell you off” 😂😂😂
This is just so sad, frustrating and downright heartbreaking on one hand even though I understand WHAT they were trying to learn that would help, save many more over decades...
Oh, yes, the reckless 1930s... An Era which constantly reminds us one actual, dark aspect of the Human Being: not just Nature vs. Nurture, the actual truth is that often we learn best after having made mistakes. BIG, BAD mistakes...
I'm curious as to what happened to Gua and Donald after the experiment ended...How much was their development affected, and did it cause any issues in their future?
Neglected and/or badly treated kids tend to recover well if they are adopted before the age of 3, so he probably turned out normal, as he wasn't neglected, just got some chimp impressions. Very few people have memories of being under 4 years old, so really doubt he can remember Gua. As for Gua, many have mentioned she died shortly after..
We treated our 4 months puppy like a human too thinking he would behave like a human and well maybe speak too😅🤣... but yea he started barking at around 1 and half years. Even now at 3 years old I don't think his barking sounds comprehensible😅
I personally believe this one theory: when humans are born, our brains aren't very developed. Meanwhile when animals are born, their brains are far more developed. As time goes on, their brains will finish developing. Part of why "nature" might be so strong is not only a shorter timespan to "mold" the brain a certain way, there's less of the undeveloped brain to mold. Human babies are so impressionable because it's so easy to imprint them- and unimprint them. It's also why humans need like 20 years to mature while other animals are adults in like 6 months. There's less to learn for them to survive.
Unethical scientific research seeks to answer the most interesting questions. Unfortunately, it's deeply harmful to the subjects. For example, it would be cool to know the limits of the human genome (how large or small can a human be and still be healthy), but obviously we can't force a group of humans to selectively reproduce like that on any time scales in an ethical manner.
I will have these random moments where I think “Hmmm what would have happened if humans evolved from wolves or something?” Or “wow humans built this entire room. Humans. Not dogs. Not cats. Humans.” Or “Why dove we think we’re so high and mighty when we’re just destroying the earth?” Tis fun to think about.
Animals (and toddlers) primarily communicate nonverbally. A baby will show you what they want (or need) if you know how to "read" their nonverbal communication. Likewise, any pet owner can tell you they know when their cat/dog is hungry or needs something. As a dad with a daughter who grew up around a lot of animals, the simpler way animals communicate is easier for children to understand. Where the psychologists failed their son was differentiating to him the two different "languages". I will say that every animal has it's own firm of communication. Even my daughter and I had our own form of sign language before she could speak. Words went with those signs, and words replaced those signs over time. A chimp could grow up alongside a human child, but the child would have to be taught there are different ways of talking to either species. The separation from her adopted brother, her only social family, would have been devastating psychologically.
These kind of videoes are really enterteining i would litteraly spend days watching this stuff... animals + funny situation = pre entertaiment. Keep going like this man and you will have a lot of succes on yt, i'M also trying to make something new on the platform for example showing how animals are when they are babies and making video likethis i'm also discovering a lot of animals babies i didn't expect them being like tha
Gua DID very much learn human behaviour, just not talking - their anatomy won't even allow it - and ofcourse she had her limits what she could learn. But Gua ended up with a horrible destiny. She went on to be used in experiments where she was kept solitary in a cage. The rest of her life I think. Don't remember fully. But it was horrible. Her family was taken twice from her and then she was tortured.
Extremely important study to back up the importance of peer learning and socialization, as well as the impact of siblings in such processes in child development and primary language acquisition tho.
They should've done this experiment when Donald is older because doing this experiment with no expiriences is very bad and I also feel really bad to Gua and Donald they did not deserve this.
this experiment teaches 2 lessons, 1: higher animals can adapt down but lower animals can't adapt up. 2: mothers should be independent and have autonomy, so they don't have to make their kids live with a man who tries to conduct experiments on them.
An interesting book related to this topic is How Stella Learned to Talk by Christina Hunger. She is a speech language pathologist who successfully taught her dog to use buttons to communicate with humans, and the book is about her process/journey to that
Trying to figure out Amala and Kamala. They were found together and, according to the graphic, both were born in 1919. But Amala died at 18 months and Kamala was eight years old when found.
@@bobowon5450 I'm not so sure , it kinda sounds like their son which they used as a control wasn't neurotypical. Something which often only gets noticed when speech is delayed.
Imagine being gifted your body and your life, only for it to be used in the most horrible and traumatic way and have the gift taken from you shortly afterwards. This is possibly the worst life anyone could experience.
Raising an animal like a human will give you vastly different results compared to raising a human like an animal. One of the things that really sets us aside from other species and makes us human is our ability to adapt to our surroundings. Thats one of the core characteristics that allowed us to become what we are today. We are basically computers waiting to be programmed. We, as well as all life, are limited by our hardware (nature/genetics), but depending on the software used (nuture/envirnoment) with humans, the variations of the finished product are limitless. Our ability to become what our surroundings demand us become for the sake of survival is off the charts. Adaptability and ingenuinity. No other species has that kind of range on what they can essentially turn into. We might be able to show animals more complex concepts that they naturally wouldnt have encountered which may ultimately help them evolve into a superior species one day. But that wont happen in any single specimens life time. No single animal will ever be human enough in its own lifetime. We could culture chimp-humans but that would mean speeding up and forcing evolution to take specific routes. We could culture Chimps to be as human-like as possible and eventually, that will start to change them on a biological level that they otherwise wouldnt have had naturally. One genetic mutation/adaption at a time until entire populations of chimps can speak languages like we can. We could even force their evolution to the point where they could go to work for us.
This is one of the many reasons as to why the concept of humanitarian exists. Though it still sucks that children's rights don't exist here in the entirety of the US.
I was at a friend's house and she has dogs. I don't really care for dogs, so my friend just said, "Tell her no", to leave me alone. I immediately made a hissing sound like a cat without thinking about it. So, yeah, that happened.
I feel horrible for Gua, imagine growing up with a loving family and then out of nowhere they abandon you but you don't understand why. Gua didn't know she was just part of an experiment, this was her family. Of course Donald was also a victim, but he at least got to stay with his parents.
That's exactly what I thought
Gua was separated from her family not just once, but twice.
My heart breaks for Gua. She deserved better
@@7monometmonkey +human family = 2 family.
@@7monomet It happened before, when she was taken from her birth mother at 7 months old to be a test subject for the experiment.
I Googled; Gua reportedly died less than a year after being returned to the primate center. The reported cause of death was pneumonia, but I wonder if psychological factors played a role in her death. Was she ever able to reintergrate with the group? Did her mother remember her, and re-bond with her? Her short life was so full of trauma.
"pneumonia" left in a cold cage no doubt
@äpplet 1234 Exactly, it kills me how people don´t stop to think that, life out on the wild is way way harder than in human society where you don´t have to worry about being prey, about diseases, about being out in the cold or having to fight for food, it is crucial for an animal to learn how to adapt to the environment at a young age.
(i know that this isn´t the case for all humans, there are people that still have to worry about all of that, but i´m referring to people like the ones conducting the experiment).
😢😢
800th like! i feel so sorry for gua, she was just torn away from her loving family without knowing whats going on.
My thoughts exactly! The poor thing🥲🥲
I wonder how this kid felt about all of this, when somebody told him. To learn that your parents didn't experiment only on an animal but also on their own son. What kind of an ever lasting effect did this experiment had on their own son?
Neglected and/or badly treated kids tend to recover well if they are adopted before the age of 3, so if not taking into account the parent-child relationship this family might have, he probably turned out normal. Kids tend to "be brainwashed" by whatever the parents tell them, so if they phrased it correctly he might not mind, very few people have memories of being under 4 years old, so really doubt he can remember Gua. If he really took his life a few years after his parents passed away, they must have been very important to him?
@@ninjal7588Not even an entire year after they died he took his life. You’re right, I’m guessing that they mattered a lot to him.
@@Frost_Phantasm Or that he didn't know how to live without them around. (Children from controlling homes often feel this way as they were never allowed to do anything on their own.)
Ah and you think the kid has the worst part gua has the worst part wen a metorite is gone to fall on all of us
I wonder if they used an older child (maybe 2 years old?) and a younger monkey they might have gotten results closer to what they wanted. The problem was the baby wasn’t a full human yet and hadn’t learned enough human behaviors and the monkey was too old and had learned too many monkey behaviors
The results would be interesting but nowadays it would be allowed as it would be cruel
No more monkey experiments!
@@kimberlyrichardson5943 ya but if the experiment goes wrong are they just supposed to keep and animal for the rest of its life that could be potentially dangerous? (chimps aren't known for being the nicest animals)
You got a point there. The Out come would be different. And older child age 2 can talk and has learned more and a baby monkey. The monkey would have human behavior. Thank you Millie🤔
it's still not gonna work, the 2 year old child still would've had slow development progress, just like Donald.
This is twisted, but what is revealed in human psychology with regards to interspecies interactions like this is quite insightful
Yeah sadly there is no humane way to gain that type of information, science can be very cruel in order to gain especific things
@@samuel-rw3xt In such a pursuit, it would be considered a "necessary evil." Cruelty to people and animals tells us about their limitations and capabilities.
You could get the same study without the trauma. Im sure he wasn't the first baby with a chimp in the house. imho, the parents were terrible and failed to integrate the chimp and the child as family members, looking at them more like subjects. This could have had a happier ending. I don't think the parents effectively communicated with the son either, which is a huge part of human development.
@@brad885 you may have a point for this case, but I'm addressing the idea of unethical experimentation as a whole.
How would we know how people act under extreme stress?
How would we know the absolute limitations of our bodies?
Where does that info come from, and how is it verifiable?
Yeah we can be awful to them. Nope I don't think we need this experiment to tell us that.
Does anyone know how that boy's life played out after? I'm curious if he was generally normal afterwards
He traveled to Africa and changed his name to Tarzan.
@@madero-jb5ri and Tarzan became immortal after behead some people
@Adanaf Feyssa That was Gua, the chimpanzee who died of pneumonia aged 3. Their son Donald took his own life at age 43. A heartbreaking end for both of them.
He became president.
@@DubstepNarwhall oh no😢😢😢
I adopted a puppy, and at 1 year old he spoke a heartfelt speech at university graduation day,
At 2 years old he became a cyber security specialist, pay my house mortgage, celebrated father's day with me, intros his girlfriend to me.
Im so proud 🥹
I’ve actually watched a different video covering the same topic in the past. This is pretty horrible and sad for the baby as he, with a monkey for 270 days adapted the monkey’s behavior and he can’t act like a regular human being
Can you tell which video it was ? I thought brew had already made a video on this experiment??
I m so confused..
@@arnav5391 It was by project nightfall
Brew: Describing disturbing and pretty creepy stuff.
Also Brew: *Sweet intro music*
Bre
Doki doki zukizuki I chi fu
Fr
Tin tin tin, ta ta ta
When you know the last name of the family is Kellogg, you know it's gonna be some messed up stuff.
That was the first thing I thought when I heard the "Kellogg" name
Kellogg's Cereal 💀
@@pico5433
Ouchie
@@pico5433 Kellogg’s corn flakes
Have you heard of the language experiment done on a young male orangutan? He was able to get simple words like Koko, and was very social with the researchers and grad students at the university where he lived. The grad students would take him out for icecream as a treat sometimes and people usually thought it was cute until he started getting bigger and accidentally hurt someone. Because of this incident they had to stop their studies and he was sent to a nearby zoo. The saddest part is that the researchers would go to the zoo to check in on him and see how he was doing, but he wasn’t able to socialize with the other orangutans, and would communicate things akin to “why am I in here with these animals, take me home” (that’s a translation by his researchers, no apes have been able to string together full sentences, even after being taught words)
there is no way he can communicate that, so they cannot have been able to translate it, it's pure fiction.
This makes me so sad bc my name is Koko
Great video, and very ethically questionable experiment but it's still interesting to learn about it. Just my honest opinion, I'd like to see more of Brew, because I feel some lines like "we need to keep eye on the crows" work best with Brew expression because that'd honestly be hilarious! xD
I agree.
Nevermore.
@@MichaelSHartman glad that you agree too :] I am assuming the team were just experimenting with video styles but it's good to tell them what you think about it too.
He's the reason I watch Brew, there's no Brew without Brew. 😰
My youngest niece just turned a year old, and she’s in the babbling gibberish stage of talking. It’s hilarious to watch and listen to her “tell you off” 😂😂😂
Sometimes my niece says just climbs up on a chair and wags her finger at me and says "HEY! No no no bella."
Which of Tom Cruise's middle front teeth are you?
@@stormy5925 Wait what
That basically confirms that *for humans, the ego develops far earlier than the intellect!* :D
@@joaovictorsalesgomes1614 depends on the day
I saw this before, kind of sad that the guy did this to his own son, and I am pretty sure he would regret that
Well he probably did regret. After all, his kid getting a bad influence was an unpredicted side effect.
I remember seeing this story on Animal Planet once. I wonder if there were any lasting side effects from the experiment?
If you even need to ask....
Brew, your videos are always great but I'd love to see more strange experiment stories! This was super interesting (and a little sad of course)
It must've been much easier to be a parent in the 1920s, what with all the psychological experiments you could do to your own children.
So few took advantage of that and stuck to beating.
Human brains are very malleable, especially in childhood. That's why grooming is so sinister and dangerous.
Remember kids, never experiment with a child and an ape
Good job, brew, yet another banger of a video!
poor Harambe🗿
Darn it there goes my weekend
I guess the only thing limiting crows are their vocal cords, and opposable thumbs. Maybe even their hollow bone structure
I still love that the sign language chimp’s name is Nim Chimpsky. Important study like that and they name the animal a pun on a linguistics researcher
Tis also a tad ironic that Nim had no real concept of grammar
This is just so sad, frustrating and downright heartbreaking on one hand even though I understand WHAT they were trying to learn that would help, save many more over decades...
We went over this in phycology class at the beginning of the year. The intro description immediately made me know it was the monkey sister study.
Oh, yes, the reckless 1930s... An Era which constantly reminds us one actual, dark aspect of the Human Being: not just Nature vs. Nurture, the actual truth is that often we learn best after having made mistakes. BIG, BAD mistakes...
14:37 all the horrible aspects of the experiment aside, gotta appreciate the hitch-hiker's guide to the galaxy reference
I'm lmaoing at "retired circus chimp" 😂 what did he expect?!
Such a cruel experiment. I feel so bad 😞
I agree. Awful!
I am so glad this famous case got covered by brew awesome video guys!
Imagine what their child would say when growing up... Or better yet imagine their parents needing to explain their sister wasn't human.
I wish you included what happened to them after the experiment
No Brew on screen...? Huh?? That's.... odd
I mean we had a picture of Baby Brew? Lol that's almost something?
I'm curious as to what happened to Gua and Donald after the experiment ended...How much was their development affected, and did it cause any issues in their future?
Gua pretty much died of pneumonia after a year
Neglected and/or badly treated kids tend to recover well if they are adopted before the age of 3, so he probably turned out normal, as he wasn't neglected, just got some chimp impressions. Very few people have memories of being under 4 years old, so really doubt he can remember Gua. As for Gua, many have mentioned she died shortly after..
@@ninjal7588 Yes. She died of pneumonia due to the environmental change
Could the son sue the parents?
No, but he can throw a banana at them.
Don't think the kid will even remember that
Always a good day when there is a brew video
This guy is really really underrated brew seriously deservs more
We treated our 4 months puppy like a human too thinking he would behave like a human and well maybe speak too😅🤣... but yea he started barking at around 1 and half years. Even now at 3 years old I don't think his barking sounds comprehensible😅
Finally - a video that doesn't make me afraid of something
It makes me afraid of how inhumane those parents were.
we're so preoccupied with whether we could, we didn't stop to think whether we should
CHECKMATE
You can easily make a drinking game every time Brew says "Gua".
I personally believe this one theory: when humans are born, our brains aren't very developed. Meanwhile when animals are born, their brains are far more developed. As time goes on, their brains will finish developing. Part of why "nature" might be so strong is not only a shorter timespan to "mold" the brain a certain way, there's less of the undeveloped brain to mold. Human babies are so impressionable because it's so easy to imprint them- and unimprint them. It's also why humans need like 20 years to mature while other animals are adults in like 6 months. There's less to learn for them to survive.
Gua was also technically a preteen
Unethical scientific research seeks to answer the most interesting questions. Unfortunately, it's deeply harmful to the subjects. For example, it would be cool to know the limits of the human genome (how large or small can a human be and still be healthy), but obviously we can't force a group of humans to selectively reproduce like that on any time scales in an ethical manner.
9months is a very long time for a child's development at that age...
that is a very interesting subject of study, for sure!! I wonder how he managed to convince his wife though... 🤔
It was a joint paper they both worked on the same trade
He should stick to making cereals.
I will have these random moments where I think “Hmmm what would have happened if humans evolved from wolves or something?” Or “wow humans built this entire room. Humans. Not dogs. Not cats. Humans.” Or “Why dove we think we’re so high and mighty when we’re just destroying the earth?” Tis fun to think about.
earliest Ive been to brew!
I think this one will be coo coo
That was such a crazy experiment!
And it ended in tears!
Love the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy reference!
Brew video.. with no brew on screen? Aw.. sad- ;-;
Been wondering when yall would do a video on this.
Kellogg is a mad scientist
Good job making yet another banger, brew!
Serious Fullmetal Alchemist vibes coming out from this story 😬
Shou Tucker be like-
Animals (and toddlers) primarily communicate nonverbally. A baby will show you what they want (or need) if you know how to "read" their nonverbal communication. Likewise, any pet owner can tell you they know when their cat/dog is hungry or needs something. As a dad with a daughter who grew up around a lot of animals, the simpler way animals communicate is easier for children to understand. Where the psychologists failed their son was differentiating to him the two different "languages". I will say that every animal has it's own firm of communication. Even my daughter and I had our own form of sign language before she could speak. Words went with those signs, and words replaced those signs over time. A chimp could grow up alongside a human child, but the child would have to be taught there are different ways of talking to either species.
The separation from her adopted brother, her only social family, would have been devastating psychologically.
Sad but definitely not "the most disturbing human experiment".
This is really messed up
It rubs the lotion on its skin, or else it gets the reet again.
There were some legitimate wolf children for sure.
That animation at 0:37 😂 even better at 11:28
I went back to check that and…thank you 😂😂
These kind of videoes are really enterteining i would litteraly spend days watching this stuff... animals + funny situation = pre entertaiment. Keep going like this man and you will have a lot of succes on yt, i'M also trying to make something new on the platform for example showing how animals are when they are babies and making video likethis i'm also discovering a lot of animals babies i didn't expect them being like tha
There surely a kinder way to separate them. That's tragic and cruel.
Love the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy reference. A frumpy frood always knows where their towel is.
Gua DID very much learn human behaviour, just not talking - their anatomy won't even allow it - and ofcourse she had her limits what she could learn.
But Gua ended up with a horrible destiny. She went on to be used in experiments where she was kept solitary in a cage. The rest of her life I think.
Don't remember fully. But it was horrible. Her family was taken twice from her and then she was tortured.
Gua died a year after the experiment from pneumonia
This experiment was needlessly cruel. It was done under the assumption that animals don't have emotions when they do.
When you return to monke TOO FAR!
Extremely important study to back up the importance of peer learning and socialization, as well as the impact of siblings in such processes in child development and primary language acquisition tho.
“Kellogg”
Me: where have I heard that before? (Cereal)
*“💀 Alr, those parents are tied with Asian Parents.”*
11:14 this is adorable, I can't-
These experiments were horrible. How did they think it was okay?
They should've done this experiment when Donald is older because doing this experiment with no expiriences is very bad and I also feel really bad to Gua and Donald they did not deserve this.
I remember I remember hearing about this experiment
1:29 his tenhead 😭🤚
this experiment teaches 2 lessons, 1: higher animals can adapt down but lower animals can't adapt up. 2: mothers should be independent and have autonomy, so they don't have to make their kids live with a man who tries to conduct experiments on them.
I remember casual geographic talking about this. It is messed up
Go back I wanna be monke!
-a experimented child
My name is Luella! I’ve never met anybody in person with the same name, so I was very surprised that she was in your video!
This is actually one of the tamest human experiments I've heard of 😴
This is horrific
Love the nod to hitchhikers guide to the galaxy towards the end 🐬
An interesting book related to this topic is How Stella Learned to Talk by Christina Hunger. She is a speech language pathologist who successfully taught her dog to use buttons to communicate with humans, and the book is about her process/journey to that
Trying to figure out Amala and Kamala. They were found together and, according to the graphic, both were born in 1919. But Amala died at 18 months and Kamala was eight years old when found.
I watched another video on this and they said they stoped because the human baby was becoming very behind after a while
How evil can you be to plan on messing up your son
the plan was clearly not to mess up the son. that was a side effect.
@@bobowon5450 I'm not so sure , it kinda sounds like their son which they used as a control wasn't neurotypical. Something which often only gets noticed when speech is delayed.
this is by far not the "Most DISTURBING Human Experiment" by a long shot
This is all very interesting experiment wise… But this is so cruel 😢
Imagine being gifted your body and your life, only for it to be used in the most horrible and traumatic way and have the gift taken from you shortly afterwards. This is possibly the worst life anyone could experience.
I still miss the iconic voiced disclaimer. Bring it back :( it was so good brew
Raising an animal like a human will give you vastly different results compared to raising a human like an animal.
One of the things that really sets us aside from other species and makes us human is our ability to adapt to our surroundings. Thats one of the core characteristics that allowed us to become what we are today.
We are basically computers waiting to be programmed. We, as well as all life, are limited by our hardware (nature/genetics), but depending on the software used (nuture/envirnoment) with humans, the variations of the finished product are limitless. Our ability to become what our surroundings demand us become for the sake of survival is off the charts. Adaptability and ingenuinity.
No other species has that kind of range on what they can essentially turn into.
We might be able to show animals more complex concepts that they naturally wouldnt have encountered which may ultimately help them evolve into a superior species one day. But that wont happen in any single specimens life time. No single animal will ever be human enough in its own lifetime. We could culture chimp-humans but that would mean speeding up and forcing evolution to take specific routes.
We could culture Chimps to be as human-like as possible and eventually, that will start to change them on a biological level that they otherwise wouldnt have had naturally. One genetic mutation/adaption at a time until entire populations of chimps can speak languages like we can. We could even force their evolution to the point where they could go to work for us.
Curious George, but a full family
Why isn't brew in this video?
Ninm chimpsky... reference to one of my most respected authors, Noam Chomsky.
Then buttons emerged and now animals have demands and attitude lol
Can you do a video on rheumatic fever/heart disease in rare adult cases?
Nwhy parents need a way to prove they can parent
This is one of the many reasons as to why the concept of humanitarian exists.
Though it still sucks that children's rights don't exist here in the entirety of the US.
They absolutely do exist. Kids have rights.
am just gonna imagine that you said the F world every time you finished a sentence
Why is this story being told by everyone lately? It’s not like it was just discovered.
My guess is it somehow went viral because some popular person made a video.
Right?
Wait a minute brew tell me about those crows
I was at a friend's house and she has dogs. I don't really care for dogs, so my friend just said, "Tell her no", to leave me alone. I immediately made a hissing sound like a cat without thinking about it. So, yeah, that happened.