Brains Are Not Required When It Comes to Thinking and Solving Problems--Simple Cells Can Do It | Scientific American
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The planarian is nobody’s idea of a genius. A flatworm shaped like a comma, it can be found wriggling through the muck of lakes and ponds worldwide. Its pin-size head has a microscopic structure that passes for a brain. Its two eyespots are set close together in a way that makes it look cartoonishly confused. It aspires to nothing more than life as a bottom-feeder.

But the worm has mastered one task that has eluded humanity’s greatest minds: perfect regeneration. Tear it in half, and its head will grow a new tail while its tail grows a new head. After a week two healthy worms swim away.

Growing a new head is a neat trick. But it’s the tail end of the worm that intrigues Tufts University biologist Michael Levin. He studies the way [bodies develop from single cells](https://www.s…

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