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Why have giant beasts not gained sentience yet?

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Humans are the ones destroying this planet. Ever wonder if our species was the anomaly?

Our species is also the only one with a fraction of a possibility of "saving the planet" (whatever than means) if an asteroid was coming this way.
You're welcome, alligators.
 
What no one in the thread has noted yet is that they don't lack sentience, they lack sapience.

This may seem like minor and petty semantics, but it is an important distinction to make. We are after all Homo Sapiens.

Maybe it was the ideal environment our post Cro-magnon ancestors lived in which created the perfect conditions for mental development. Chimps and other primates know ow to use tools too. Our branch just perfected making stuff.

IIRC this is thought to be largely because we came down out of the trees onto the plains and had to learn to hunt large game which in turn supplied us with the excess nutrients we needed to evolve larger brains to enable us to get better at hunting large game. Our ancestors put themselves(or were forced, quite possibly by the ancestors of the other great ape species) into an environment where their only evolutionary advantage was their intelligence, because they had no way of physically competing. Though going back to my 'sentience vs sapience' distinction, I believe this was mostly a 'software' change, as the hardware of our brains is only incrementally more complex than any of the other hominines certainly. It is the software that made the difference.
 
I always found it weird how for other animals there are a multitude of species while for humanity there is only one left. And all the other ones cannot hold a candle to our intelligence
 
What no one in the thread has noted yet is that they don't lack sentience, they lack sapience.

This may seem like minor and petty semantics, but it is an important distinction to make. We are after all Homo Sapiens.
People I have found are not that wise (myself included). Sounds like a misnomer
 
Our species is also the only one with a fraction of a possibility of "saving the planet" (whatever than means) if an asteroid was coming this way.
You're welcome, alligators.

Its a shame we werent around 65 million years ago. We'd kick that asteroids ass and save the dinos
 
Humans are giant beasts. We tend to look at the animals that are bigger than us and think that we're a small species. But the truth is that humans are easily in the top 99.99 percentile of size when compared against all animal species. The vast majority of animals in the world are tiny relative to humans.
 
I always found it weird how for other animals there are a multitude of species while for humanity there is only one left. And all the other ones cannot hold a candle to our intelligence

Technically there are 7 extant species in the hominid family. If you step down to the Genus level(Homo), we are the only ones left, but that is not all that uncommon in taxonomy, for example in reptiles, the largest group of genera have only 1 species in them.

Some genera do have many species though, some insect genera have 1000+ species.

But then this whole taxonomy thing is something we made up, and is arbitrary to a large degree.
 
But they already have.

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On a more serious note. Environmental adaptation hasnt caused large animals to evolve critical thinking.
 
Elephants mourn their dead. They bury fruits and come back later when they have fermented and they get drunk and rub on trees and shit. They have a fun time hosing each other down with their trunks and they aren't ruining life on earth for everyone else. An elephant will paint you a tree and take you for the ride of your life. Elephants are stone cold chillers. Just because they didn't make Thor 2 doesn't mean they aren't killing it in their own way.
 
I don't question science with science, I find it lacks a certain touch that the scientific mind can't relate to. This will sound insane to some but I question science against nature and nature I question against religion and religion I question against science. In that thinking I find balanced answers.

What I get from this is that you don't understand science because you refuse to work within the boundaries of reality and evidence, so you spin it as scientific minds being unable to "relate to" it. That's not how science works. It's not that scientific minds don't relate to what you say, it's that they recognize it as irrelevant to the discussion at hand.

I always found it weird how for other animals there are a multitude of species while for humanity there is only one left. And all the other ones cannot hold a candle to our intelligence

An alien race creating a taxonomy for Earth's animals would almost certainly just call humans a third type of chimpanzee. We don't do that because we think we're too special for that.
 
Technically there are 7 extant species in the hominid family. If you step down to the Genus level(Homo), we are the only ones left, but that is not all that uncommon in taxonomic, for example in reptiles, the largest group of genera have only 1 species in them.

Some genera do have many species though, some insect genera have 1000+ species.

But then this whole taxonomy thing is something we made up, and is arbitrary to a large degree.

Made up as it is, its still curious nothing close to being like us exists or has forawhile apparently.
 
Made up as it is, its still curious nothing close to being like us exists or has forawhile apparently.

Several other hominin species were around as recently as a hundred thousand years ago, which is a blink of an eye in evolutionary timeframes.
 
Multitude of factors. Need, environment, genetics, time.


Because we saw them roaming the land and the sea and we killed them.

We'll keep doing this slowly until they're all dead. Whales, elephants, whatever.

Lol excellent analysis.
 
Hard to explain why I feel this way( plus I'm on mobile and can't type very well) but I'll try.

I don't question science with science, I find it lacks a certain touch that the scientific mind can't relate to. This will sound insane to some but I question science against nature and nature I question against religion and religion I question against science. In that thinking I find balanced answers. In other words

" DonÂ’t be too proud of this technological terror youÂ’ve constructed. The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the Force."

It's a movie, yes but it does convey some of my thoughts.
Sorry, but all this means is that you don't understand science.
 
Depends what evolution prioritized. Chimpanzees have superior visual processing time to humans, and certain cetaceans have evolved Spindle neurons, which are mostly found in hominids. Rats have faster brain stem transmission, etc.
 
This is one area I'll def say fuck you got mine when it comes to intelligence against a croc . And make sure I stay ahead . Happy being intelligence elite within species . Don't want to die .
 
Made up as it is, its still curious nothing close to being like us exists or has forawhile apparently.

Several other hominin species were around as recently as a hundred thousand years ago, which is a blink of an eye in evolutionary timeframes.

^^

All depends on how you define 'close' and 'a while'.

H. neanderthalensis was certainly 'close' by any reasonable definition of the term, and they were around basically yesterday in evolutionary terms.

Chimpanzees are arguably close today even. Gorillas a bit less so. The society and technology we have built exaggerates our differences, but evolutionarily we are pretty damn close.
 
Wouldn't evolution suggest that there should be a greater range of intelligence in nature between bacteria, goat/cow/chicken, dog/dolphin/chimpanzee, and human?

It's pretty much biological response only, survival instinct, basic input and response, and then language, problem solving, love, society, laws, and programming artificial intelligence and self driving vehicles.

It's one of the reasons I think evolution is a natural occurrence of the environment and ecosystem set in place by an intelligent design, not the thing that created the ecoaystem itself.
 
You have to remember that humans are the whole package, baby, not just big sexy brains.

That elephant has a big brain? Good for him. Those big eyes of his are still pretty rubbish, though, so his ability to gather data about his surroundings is still hampered. Those big, stampy feet of his are similarly an impediment, as not being able to "feel things out" and interact with environments in novel ways in another enormous loss of data.

Check out cephalopods for a good example of this: smaller and less "evolved" brain structures than elephants, but because their ability to perceive and interact with their environment is orders of magnitude better, they have intelligence much closer to what we would think of as being human-like.
 
I think you need to get out more.

Have you seen what we have accomplished? You never look at a cityscape or some art and think this was all just some stuff in the ground?

We have done amazing things. And the planet is fine, and will be fine.
 
Wouldn't evolution suggest that there should be a greater range of intelligence in nature between bacteria, goat/cow/chicken, dog/dolphin/chimpanzee, and human?

It's pretty much biological response only, survival instinct, basic input and response, and then language, problem solving, love, society, laws, and programming artificial intelligence and self driving vehicles.

It's one of the reasons I think evolution is a natural occurrence of the environment and ecosystem set in place by an intelligent design, not the thing that created the ecoaystem itself.
There already is a great degree of variation in intelligence, you can always arbitrarily decide you want more degrees, but that's not how evolution works.
All life may have come from a common ancestor, but each species evolved according to its necessities, it's not like a linear graphic where there's a species with X intelligence, another with X+1 and so on until we reach humans. That's just not how it works.

Have you seen what we have accomplished? You never look at a cityscape or some art and think this was all just some stuff in the ground?

We have done amazing things. And the planet is fine, and will be fine.
The planet will indeed be fine. The ecosystem on the other hand...
 
Our physiology plays a large part in that too, I remember that was brought up in some documentaries. Especially our hands, form and opposing thumbs (and the coordination of our eyes/brain with them).
 
The planet will indeed be fine. The ecosystem on the other hand...

Which ecosystem? Ours?

We might be fucked, sure. Maybe even a few other animals. But that's not the planet. Planet is doing great.
 
Yet sadly his/her kind, even after millions of years, remains as dumb feeders, didn't grow much of a brain i see...look at him/her just crawling around while we drive in our advanced machinery taking a video of it. We live in our high cooling towers while their kind crawl around in hot dirty mud...ewww.

Praise the almighty God for granting us the power to rule the universe.

Intelligence isn't the end goal of evolution. Gaters work well in their niche, so they stayed like that. Cheetahs gained the ability to run fast instead of intelligence.

There are lots of factors that culminated in human intelligence, cooking food and growing a smaller digestive tract being one of them, and it's hard to do that without having hands and thumbs first.
 
why do animals with giant brains like elephants or whales not develop/evolve complexity to be as smart as us? They're social, or at least as social as we used to be in super early human eras, and their brains are massive, but I guess their neural infrastructure is not as complicated? Why doesn't it develop further?

Do you really not understand this?

How is an elephant supposed to use and develop tools? Without that ability theres nothing to push critical thinking and make intelligence a more important natural selection factor then size and strength.
 
Sounds odd but do you really think humanity would allow another species to be as developed or intelligent as we are?

even in the modern day if we discovered a race or a species that started developing similar things like technology and language do you think we'd leave them alone? We'd capture and study the shit out them, they'd have to live in zoos.

Take the same principle back to primitive times and it's likely we wiped out any other species that could've developed into or been a rival.
 
Which ecosystem? Ours?

We might be fucked, sure. Maybe even a few other animals. But that's not the planet. Planet is doing great.
Ecosystem as in Earth's ecosystem, dramatic climate changes will likely destroy many many "local" ecosystems, life could change dramatically. The planet will be fine until the sun expands or blows up or whatever, the issue is what's on the planet.
 
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