Darkhole
Number one grandson
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2007
- Messages
- 138
I don't really want to risk derailing this thread, it is learned. Not all dogs kills small animals.
Young birds flee away for birds of prey silhouette.
I don't really want to risk derailing this thread, it is learned. Not all dogs kills small animals.
Young birds flee away for birds of prey silhouette.
Um, you don't know how to feed your self instinctualy, it is learned. Some animals do have hard wiring for cetain behaviors, but humans don't. Most of it is learned through association and conditioning.
Please define "a very short period of time" and cite evidence that supports this claimAt some point in our evolution our intelligence jumped exponentially in a very short period of time
Yep, reality sure is counter-intuitive, ain't it?However again, I say that the liklihood of a chance anomalous mutation suddenly sprouting a perfectly working bio-supercomputer just doesn't seem likely.
Yep, reality sure is counter-intuitive, ain't it?
Check out 'Evolution IS a Blind Watchmaker' on youTube
Yep, reality sure is counter-intuitive, ain't it?
Check out 'Evolution IS a Blind Watchmaker' on youTube
Thank you for your response. It maight take us a few posts to get this really on track, but at least we're off to a good start. Please note that I cautioned against thinking my example was the same logic as the blind watchmaker, because it's not. In fact, I agree that the blind watchmaker analogy is flawed and I understand it perfectly well. In a nutshell; evolution is the dynamic change of organisms involving many many small changes over such a long period of time that humans are not privy to observing it directly and therefore have a hard time accepting it as fact. Here is what makes my example different:
First, the CPU analogy is just to provide an appreciation for the level of complexity we are dealing with in a brain, not as a rationale for denying evolution. Thertefore the blind watchmaker analogy doesn't apply to my example. As mentioned in my post, I believe evolution takes place. Second, my reason for being skeptical is because the norms of the evolutionary model that are used to explain the evolutionary process are incongruous with the facts in my example.
Sure, less complex biological features do evolve over the course of millenia, but really complex stuff takes much much ... much longer. That is unless we throw in random chance "mutation" as a causal factor. Normally, with respect to human intelligence and the biological mechanism behind it ( a bio-supercomputer: Reminder: we aren't talking about a whole brain here. I agree that brains on the whole do evolve.), we are dealing with a facet of our biology that shouldn't just pop into existence overnight in evolutionary time, but it did, and therein lies the mystery.
But does this mean there was some "intelligent intervention"? It's possible. But I don't know for certain. I don't think it's all that unreasonable to suggest it as a possibility. Right now I'm hoping that genetic research will lead to some definitive answers, and I welcome any furher solid data on this issue ( actual science ) as well as other thoughts that contribute in a constructive way.
j.r.
The arrival of homo sapiens sapiens with our advanced brain is much more recent. The fossilized skulls of two adults and one child discovered in the Afar region of eastern Ethiopia have been dated at 160,000 years, making them the oldest known fossils of modern humans, or Homo sapiens. So we aren't talking millions of years here.
We've lacked intermediate fossils between pre-humans and modern humans, between 100,000 and 300,000 years ago, and that's where the Herto fossils mentioned above fit. With these new crania we can now see what our direct ancestors looked like and the change happened somewhere during a 160,000 year period, which isn't that long in evolutionary time, and may have in-fact been even shorter, but no fossils have been found yet to provide a really smooth transition.
j.r.
I'd disagree:The arrival of homo sapiens sapiens with our advanced brain is much more recent. The fossilized skulls of two adults and one child discovered in the Afar region of eastern Ethiopia have been dated at 160,000 years, making them the oldest known fossils of modern humans, or Homo sapiens. So we aren't talking millions of years here.
We've lacked intermediate fossils between pre-humans and modern humans, between 100,000 and 300,000 years ago, and that's where the Herto fossils mentioned above fit. With these new crania we can now see what our direct ancestors looked like and the change happened somewhere during a 160,000 year period, which isn't that long in evolutionary time, and may have in-fact been even shorter, but no fossils have been found yet to provide a really smooth transition.
j.r.
look at this link:
http://pandasthumb.org/archives/2006/09/fun_with_homini.html
I won't post the picture because I don't know about the copyright, but there doesn't seem to be any sudden increase to me, when you plot it on a log plot as in this, which is appropriate for proportional changes.
Um, perhaps you need to read some evolutionary biology, in the 1980 a theory called Punctuated_equilibriumWP was put forward, evolution the record often does NOT occur through gradual developments but it staggers ahead at times very quickly.I'm no theist, but neither am I ruling out the possibility that some intelligence may have had a hand in the design of things. I have heard proponents of evolution explain a lot of things, and it's good stuff. But it doesn't explain everything and there are anomalies, especially with humans.
At some point in our evolution our intelligence jumped exponentially in a very short period of time. This was due to a rapid thickening of the cerebral cortex and a refined interationship between the various lobes. The problem with this in evolutionary terms is that evolution is glacially slow and that in evolutionary time what has happened with humans is the equivalent of evolving a supercomputer ( in fact we are still smarter than supercomputers ) virtually overnight.
Pure speculation, the oldest mysths we have might be 5,000 years old or a little older. Homo sapiens sapiens is ~150,000 years old.Coincidentally we also find that it wasn't long after that that our creation myths started popping up, with many common factors in widely dispersed peoples.
Pure speculation. While we can make some inferences about the brain, we certainly don't have the type of data you're suggesting. Nerves rot fast, and all paleoanthropologists have to work with is the skull. As for biological arguments, they have some merit, but I'd still consider them to be hypotheses, and to not be terribly well tested (you can hypothesize about when things happened given modern forms, but until you find the rocks you don't know).This was due to a rapid thickening of the cerebral cortex and a refined interationship between the various lobes
The more one learns about evolutionary concepts, the more one can rule out intelligence being necessary to design things.I'm no theist, but neither am I ruling out the possibility that some intelligence may have had a hand in the design of things.
However again, I say that the liklihood of a chance anomalous mutation suddenly sprouting a perfectly working bio-supercomputer just doesn't seem likely.
This is a misconception, and a common one. Nothing in evolution sprouts out full-formed. Feathers started as shafts of, essentially, hair. Limbs started off as bulges. The brain is no different. Flatworms have nerve clusters. Roundworms have cerebral ganglia. Crustaceans have slightly more complex nerve clusters. The brain has actually been evolving for over a billion years. After a billion years of trial and error, and incremental improvements, it's not surprising that in a few cases really, really good brains came about. And ours aren't perfect. Mine, for example, only used data from one eye for the first 12 years or so. In general, we're subject to many types of brain errors, from paradolia to olfactory fatigue to the ape and basketball video. So we've got a way to go.However again, I say that the liklihood of a chance anomalous mutation suddenly sprouting a perfectly working bio-supercomputer just doesn't seem likely.
At some point in our evolution our intelligence jumped exponentially in a very short period of time. The error you're committing is in what you consider a very short period of time. If it's a few thousand generations (10,000 generations would be 200,000 years, roughly), it's geologically very rapid but it has plenty of time biologically, and can by no means be considered a short period of time in human standards.
Hm. The sentence you're discussing was supposed to be in quotes. Odd. I'm on your side here--I've seen that graph (and better), and there's no sudden increase in cranial capacity, or even a general increase when you look at all homonids (which is how those graphs were better--they included everyone).To further emphasise your point, there is no sudden change; the cranial capacity is increasing roughly according to an exponential trend* over the last 2-million years at least.
Hm. The sentence you're discussing was supposed to be in quotes. Odd. I'm on your side here--I've seen that graph (and better), and there's no sudden increase in cranial capacity, or even a general increase when you look at all homonids (which is how those graphs were better--they included everyone).