Surlethe wrote:That's a fair enough point - but suppose for the sake of discussion that it could be done in a way that the baby is not injured. What's your take then?
There is no safe way to fall down stairs. Your scenario has no contact with reality and, as such, no relevance. If the experience is not very unpleasant (and, so, dangerous) it won't work to dissuade repetitions. There is no magical sweet spot were being made to fall down a ramp of stairs isn't dangerous but teaches you about avoiding falling down ramps of stairs.
"Flick" is the best word to describe what I'm talking about: I'm not describing taking a paddle to a baby's hand.
You're describing hitting the hand hard enough to cause significant pain.
Anyway, the chief question in my mind when I posted the scenarios was: are the benefits of training toddlers or babies this way outweighed by the short-term or any long-term harm? The benefits are a better-behaved child. The short-term harm is, of course, the pain of the punishment itself. It's quite obviously a "useful" way to train, at least until a child is capable of reasoning. As long as it's not the only method of training, unless it is outweighed by long-term harm that utility is, to my mind, positive. So, what is the long-term harm?
The benefits are debatable. For example, using his hands to explore and manipulate the world is important for the cognitive development of a baby; dissuading this with physical discipline could lead to problems in that area in exchange for minor personal convenience for the parents, whom should just deal with it, since nobody forced them to procreate at gunpoint. Moreover, it doesn't even work.
Evidence?
Here, but there are a lot of other studies:
Parenting online and lay literature on infant spanking: information readily available to parents.
Parenting online and lay literature on infant spanking: information readily available to parents wrote:Professional consensus exists against the spanking of infants based on the risk of escalation and injury. Moreover, infants are unable to recognize connections between their behavior and punishment and to modify their behavior in response.
Before the inevitable nitpick, "spanking" is used in the sense of "physical discipline" and, anyway, hitting the hands is worse.
Again, evidence? I was under the impression that babies and toddlers are physically quite resilient - what do you think will happen, a flick (inflicting pain) will leave a bruise or break a bone or something?
Physically resilient? Where did you get that idea from? Their "bones", especially in the most articulated and thus frail areas, are still mostly made of hyaline cartilage, which isn't noted for its mechanical strenght. Also, their fat deposits and muscle mass are not adequate in shielding internal areas against trauma. It's much easier, for example, for a given blunt trauma to cause internal bleeding in small children than in adults.