@Seisage - our perceptions of ourselves really muddle understanding. The first thing I used to look for in fish was vision. Why? I'm a visual mammal. But how do they react with other senses, maybe ones we don't have? All I can see is you have to be smart enough to adapt to new situations and stay alive, which covers a huge amount of life. I wouldn't survive as a clam. Or maybe I would, because if I were a clam, I would have a clam's responses to its environment and I'd do just fine.
In my childhood, I was taught the king of the beasts, special human stuff, and it took a while to find other people who questioned that. It's much easier for curious people now, and we're begun to seriously pull back that curtain and look out at other species. I see that most intelligence research into other creatures looks for forms of our own reactions to the world, but I think it's useful (if limited) because it helps us understand our origins. If what we call human intelligence seems to have evolved quite early and taken different pathways in different life forms, then it adds a little to our understanding of ourselves. It would be great if we could develop that before we go extinct. It's a goal!
Online, I encounter a lot of people who would be horrified to be considered as animals. But I meet more and more who question the ideas I was raised with.
I think we have work to do to decide what human intelligence is, as it is so diverse. And we have to use what human intelligence we have to appreciate the brains of the creatures we grew beside. As a fishkeeper, I'm an omnivorous primate that likes to play with its food.
To paraphrase an old quote, the more I meet people, the more I like my fish.
In my childhood, I was taught the king of the beasts, special human stuff, and it took a while to find other people who questioned that. It's much easier for curious people now, and we're begun to seriously pull back that curtain and look out at other species. I see that most intelligence research into other creatures looks for forms of our own reactions to the world, but I think it's useful (if limited) because it helps us understand our origins. If what we call human intelligence seems to have evolved quite early and taken different pathways in different life forms, then it adds a little to our understanding of ourselves. It would be great if we could develop that before we go extinct. It's a goal!
Online, I encounter a lot of people who would be horrified to be considered as animals. But I meet more and more who question the ideas I was raised with.
I think we have work to do to decide what human intelligence is, as it is so diverse. And we have to use what human intelligence we have to appreciate the brains of the creatures we grew beside. As a fishkeeper, I'm an omnivorous primate that likes to play with its food.
To paraphrase an old quote, the more I meet people, the more I like my fish.