Another unwarranted assumption surrounds the words "need" and "want." Our homocentric view, our anthropomorphism, has us thinking they must need or want what we think they would want if they only knew as much as we do, and if they only knew they needed it. Hell, if they were smart they would be like us. :roll: We do it to each other all the time: "If only those people would be like us they wouldn't be the way they are." — James Riley
So how much more do those entities themselves have that the indigenous people learned from in the first place? — James Riley
No other animal I know of does that, right? — TheMadFool
That story about how great we are is so long engrained it has become truth. In our minds anyway. — James Riley
Well, no. Human level language equips us to transcend instinct, for example it enables us to consider "what if" questions, it allows us to consider alternatives, it allows us to pass on knowledge obtained through that kind of thinking and thereby to build on progress made by others. — Daemon
Birds, especially. — James Riley
Animals may not study our behavior the way we study animal behavior but a lot of animals certainly adapt to humans and use humans for their benefit.What I find intriguing is the learning ability of humans. Our intelligence enables us to study animal behavior and then adapt their life-skills for our benefit. No other animal I know of does that, right? — TheMadFool
Ok but my point still stands! No animal has been documented to have learned life-lessons from a human. — TheMadFool
much of the phronesis (practical wisdom) our ancestors had about plants, animals, nature's rhythms, so on, has been irretrievably lost. I wouldn't be wrong in saying that in some respects, a modern person knows less than a hunter-gatherer forebear. — TheMadFool
What life-lessons could they possibly learn from us? — Hermeticus
We have very little to teach to animals but a lot to learn from them. — Hermeticus
Tool making? Attacking/defending/foraging/etc. can be vastly improved with tools. Granted that some animals know how to fashion tools, Caledonian crows are capable of meta-tools, but none have learned it from humans. In fact, it's the opposite; as you said, — TheMadFool
Even the aspect of tool making is only practicable for a very limited number of species - mostly Hominids. A majority of animals can not grab tools like we do. At most they'd be able to use a stick like the Caledonian crows do. I feel like animals that can use tools in a sensible matter already do so - all other animals come with their tools attached to their bodies - claws, teeth, physical prowess. — Hermeticus
A tool transcends the physical limits of an organism, allows an organism to do what their bodies can't. For example, a tiger can use material at its disposal to do more than what its claws, fangs, and strength permit, that would be tool-making. — TheMadFool
- all other animals come with their tools attached to their bodies - claws, teeth, physical prowess. — Hermeticus
My point exactly. How is a tool going to allow a tiger to transcend his capabilities? Is it going to carry a butcher knife in its maw? — Hermeticus
My point exactly. How is a tool going to allow a tiger to transcend his capabilities? Is it going to carry a butcher knife in its maw? Seems impracticable consider it has claws and fangs that do the job just as well. — Hermeticus
Consider how language must have formed back in the day. We went from random noises to words to complete and ever increasingly complex sentences. This obviously started out as instinct, warning signals like monkeys do. It evolved from there but I'd argue that much of the same function is retained. The ability to consider a multitude of scenarios ("what if") beforehand is an excellent tool for survivability. I'd guess the truth lays somewhere in the middle. This ability is likely able to overwrite instinct - but at the same time it is an instinct. It's not like you have to try very hard to think at all. — Hermeticus
I think you're overlooking the vast difference between human and animal language and thought. We can say something new any time we want. No other animal can do that, and the effects are enormous. — Daemon
The difference ain't that big. All animals are culturally fixed. No language is needed. They understand one another without words. The communicate by means of body and sound. — DanLager
Right, I haven't asserted they are. They are a different mammal, running on cells, however complicatedly linked. ThisThe issue with dogs is considering them machines but not considering humans as machines. There was a hard line in science, even, with mammals as machines but not humans. Then it started to erode in the 70s. Even words can be, if one wanted, seen to be forms created by biochemical machinery, products of machines. — Bylaw
is just as problematic for human intelligence. Words get produced, movements get produced by machines.Chemotaxis is the directed motion of an organism toward environmental conditions it deems attractive and/or away from surroundings it finds repellent. Movement of flagellated bacteria such as Escherichia coli can be characterized as a sequence of smooth-swimming runs punctuated by intermittent tumbles. Tumbles last only a fraction of a second, which is sufficient to effectively randomize the direction of the next run. Runs tend to be variable in length extending from a fraction of a second to several minutes.
As E. coli cells are only a few microns long, they behave essentially as point sensors, unable to measure gradients by comparing head-to-tail concentration differences. Instead, they possess a kind of memory that allows them to compare current and past chemical environments. The probability that a smooth swimming E. coli cell will stop its run and tumble is dictated by the chemistry of its immediate surroundings compared to the chemistry it encountered a few seconds previously. — https://www.cell.com/current-biology/comments/S0960-9822(02)01424-0
The issue with dogs is considering them machines but not considering humans as machines. There was a hard line in science, even, with mammals as machines but not humans. Then it started to erode in the 70s. Even words can be, if one wanted, seen to be forms created by biochemical machinery, products of machines. — Bylaw
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