Why is there a sense that kids simply "don't remember" the pain of surgery if they are lightly anesthetized?
Do they think the nervous system is "turned off" in kids and "turns on" later? Likewise with the formation of memories. A human consciousness that is dealt searing pain under paralysis for an eon of thought-time, might trigger a life long psychosis that impairs living and learning.
The theory wasn't about remembering, it was mostly about babies supposedly having a nervous system too immature to interpret pain as in adults. This is not the current opinion at all anymore.
You are correct. But there is also the aspect that in current opinion, children below the age of 2 to 3 years do not form episodic memory. Which can reinforce the misconception about the necessity of anesthetics in children, because they are unable to recall and tell about the pain.
Anesthesia is mostly know-how. When you've put several hundred kids under, you (usually) become equipped with a good sense of what's going on, even without kids telling you.
Do they think the nervous system is "turned off" in kids and "turns on" later? Likewise with the formation of memories. A human consciousness that is dealt searing pain under paralysis for an eon of thought-time, might trigger a life long psychosis that impairs living and learning.
Or a thirst for revenge.