How was this process affected by natural and social selection pressures? — Enrique
What impact did language have on the character of human behavior as well as our rationality and irrationality? — Enrique
And the unconscious is entirely rational. Why wouldn't it be? — A Seagull
what is the relationship between language and logical thinking? — Enrique
Inference essentially consists in further cognitively aligning the perceptual phenomena of experiential states such that predictive behaviors requiring integrated awareness can be discharged with high degrees of coordination. — Enrique
All animals communicate, but only humans are rational; and for Berwick and Chomsky, human language is primarily an instrument of rationality.
Why did human language evolve? How was this process affected by natural and social selection pressures? What was the sequence and combination of mutations/cognitive features that produced its modern forms? What impact did language have on the character of human behavior as well as our rationality and irrationality? Along more philosophical lines, what is the relationship between language and logical thinking? — Enrique
Animals are quite rational about many things. They can even figure things out, like how to open doors, how to work across species to get prey (https://mymodernmet.com/badger-coyote-mutualism/). use alliances to take on a powerful bad leader, solve all sorts of problems including novel ones and more. If they weren't rational, they'd fare poorly. Of course, they are not always rational, but then who is?I think rationality cannot exist without language. In the absence of language I think all that is left is the unconscious. — CeleRate
Sure. I am not saying all animals are the same. Just that animals are rational, often. And language is an incredible tool. We can do things with it animals can literally not imagine. And lucky us, we do not have to choose between reasoning as animals do and reasoning we can do with words. Though often humans do choose to at least try to only reason with words. It's like tying one hand behind are backs. Though these last few sentences are but a tangent in this thread. My main point was that animals are generally rational.I agree that animals reason. Seems to me that human rationality does not differ from the rest of nature simply as cognitive function, but it has been elevated to the status of value system in many cultural settings, an intellectual discipline, which seems to be unique. — Enrique
Animals are quite rational about many things. They can even figure things out, like how to open doors, how to work across species to get prey — Coben
I also think natural selection as traditionally construed along with reproductive success had minimal impact on the evolution of human meaning and rationality. — Enrique
Why did human language evolve? — Enrique
Animals are quite rational about many things — Coben
The way your OP is set out, you seem to be asking human language evolved, yet you're saying now that natural selection 'as traditionally construed' had minimal impact. So that's confusing. — Wayfarer
I don't agree that demonstrating learned behaviours or being able to solve behavioural problems demonstrates rationality. Maybe it demonstrates the antecedents of rationality. — Wayfarer
The animal decides... — Coben
what the Empiricist speaks of and describes as sense-knowledge is not exactly sense-knowledge, but sense-knowledge plus unconsciously introduced intellective ingredients, -- sense-knowledge in which he has made room for reason without recognizing it. A confusion which comes about all the more easily as, on the one hand, the senses are, in actual fact, more or less permeated with reason in man, and, on the other, the merely sensory psychology of animals, especially of the higher vertebrates, goes very far in its own realm and imitates intellectual knowledge to a considerable extent. — Jacques Maritain, The Cultural Impact of Empiricism
Could you tell me why the examples I have given in the posts I responded to and in the articles should not be considered examples of animals being rational? I understand you disagree and your definition pretty much defines rationality as language based. Why should we rule out problem solving via non-linguistic processes as rational?It's a tendentious article in my opinion. In my view, rationality depends on the ability to abstract and to impute meaning. Most forms of animal behaviour can be understood in terms of stimulus and response, so that some forms of behaviour can be imputed to exhibit a kind of rationality, but in my view it's a kind of projection. — Wayfarer
All forms of animal behavior (humans also being animals) can be understood in terms of stimulus and response. — Coben
The starting point [of Chomsky's analysis] is a radical dissimilarity between all animal communication systems and human language. The former are based entirely on “linear order,” whereas the latter is based on hierarchical syntax. In particular, human language involves the capacity to generate, by a recursive procedure, an unlimited number of hierarchically structured sentences. A trivial example of such a sentence is this: “How many cars did you tell your friends that they should tell their friends . . . that they should tell the mechanics to fix?” (The ellipses indicate that the number of levels in the hierarchy can be extended without limit.) Notice that the word “fix” goes with “cars,” rather than with “friends” or “mechanics,” even though “cars” is farther apart from “fix” in linear distance. The mind recognizes the connection, because “cars” and “fix” are at the same level in the sentence’s hierarchy...
Animal communication can be quite intricate. For example, some species of “vocal-learning” songbirds, notably Bengalese finches and European starlings, compose songs that are long and complex. But in every case, animal communication has been found to be based on rules of linear order. Attempts to teach Bengalese finches songs with hierarchical syntax have failed. The same is true of attempts to teach sign language to apes. Though the famous chimp Nim Chimpsky was able to learn 125 signs of American Sign Language, careful study of the data has shown that his “language” was purely associative and never got beyond memorized two-word combinations with no hierarchical structure.
Well, one can attribute motives in all directions on an issue like this. Even 50 years ago, in science it was professionally risky to even view in professional contexts as having motivations, emotions, intentions, etc. Any researcher who found in her research that an animal had cognitive functions has me with dismissal and extreme resistance: whether the animal is a primate, bird, squid whatever. There is a huge bias to keep a huge gap between humans and other animals in how we are conceived. As in thought of, not birthed.So, what it takes to form a rational idea seems to me to be inextricably linked with language and abstraction. At best what animals demonstrate is a kind of 'proto-rationality', a rudimentary ability to identify actions and results, but calling it 'rationality' is drawing a long bow. (And I also think there's something of an ulterior motive in doing that. ) — Wayfarer
Of course there was. Something go you interested in math books that set up specific neuronal pathways in your mind that you returned to which lead to you studying math more and reading more which led to changing the neuronal pathways. Once this is all in motion of course one set of neuronal pathways can get set off by other neuronal pathways. I am not saying that causation is only external, just that it is all determined, atoms bashing into atoms, chemical machine type stuff as the physicalists conceive of it. Just because it is complex and once in motion, stays in motion doesn't make it any less stimulus and response, it's just a very very complicated version of stimulus and response.But, mathematics and so on can't be understood in those terms. There's simply no way of doing it. If you were engaged in mental arithmetic, there's no response involved - there's no behavioral indicators involved. — Wayfarer
There is a huge bias to keep a huge gap between humans and other animals in how we are conceived. — Coben
Once this is all in motion of course one set of neuronal pathways can get set off by other neuronal pathways. I am not saying that causation is only external, just that it is all determined, atoms bashing into atoms, chemical machine type stuff as the physicalists conceive of it. Just because it is complex and once in motion, stays in motion doesn't make it any less stimulus and response, it's just a very very complicated version of stimulus and response. — Coben
Given that many things they do are guided by imprinting or built in programs, the moment then run into new things, there is a strong chance they will be irrational, especially if they do not adapt and learn that though ti triggers their habits it is not what they think it is. — Coben
All forms of animal behavior (humans also being animals) can be understood in terms of stimulus and response. — Coben
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