It is interesting to contemplate these kinds of ideas. It really is a toss-up between either option simply because we don't have enough information to even begin to lean one way or another. Let me just say that the marsupials would not be able to compete with the placental mammals and would have died out had they not been cut of from the the rest of the world "down under", so they would not be a good canonical example. We still don't know exactly how life started and how likely it is to start on any given planet, etc., so it can still go either way.Conway's argument, which is based on convergence of various features across non-related species such as eyes, is that evolution would have led to something like us even if the dinosaurs had not gone extinct. Gould's argument was that evolution would most likely result in completely different life forms. The canonical examples here are from Australia, such as Koalas, Kangaroos and Platypuses. — Marchesk
That's the thing: What IS philosophy without science to prove or disprove philosophy's musings? You can sit and ponder all day about the likelihood of humanoid reptiles building a civilization, or how the mind relates to the body, etc., but it doesn't get you anywhere without acquiring more data, forming an educated guess, and then testing that guess.There's an even deeper question here. Rewinding the clock to rerun evolution is counterfactual, as Losos points out. It's a thought experiment. As such, is it more in the domain of philosophy than science? Is this topic a philosophical one? — Marchesk
Let me just say that the marsupials would not be able to compete with the placental mammals and would have died out had they not been cut of from the the rest of the world "down under", so they would not be a good canonical example. — Harry Hindu
There's an even deeper question here. Rewinding the clock to rerun evolution is counterfactual, as Losos points out. It's a thought experiment. As such, is it more in the domain of philosophy than science? Is this topic a philosophical one? — Marchesk
Two of the biggest adaptations that led humans to evolving the way they did was the brain and the stamina humans have. (our ability to generate a thin layer of sweat) I don't see how these would develop in a world dominated by massive reptiles. — yatagarasu
Or maybe we'd all look like ET and there'd be flying bicycles. — Hanover
Also that our ancestors came out of the trees. I don't know that the Velociraptor line would have gone to the trees for long enough to develop the kind of hands we have. — Marchesk
The Kardashians came from Planet 9 in Outer Space and descended from crotch lice. — Bitter Crank
I find it very unlikely something like Humans would have evolved without the extinctions of the dinosaurs. What type of reptilians do they even suggest would have led to humans evolving? Two of the biggest adaptations that led humans to evolving the way they did was the brain and the stamina humans have. (our ability to generate a thin layer of sweat) I don't see how these would develop in a world dominated by massive reptiles. — yatagarasu
Also that our ancestors came out of the trees. I don't know that the Velociraptor line would have gone to the trees for long enough to develop the kind of hands we have. — Marchesk
if you didn't know better, would you expect fish to evolve into something like us? — SophistiCat
Second, dinosaurs are not extinct. Look out the window and you'll likely see some. — SophistiCat
Maybe not if the tape was rewound, or another planet. — Marchesk
I think the meaning of the dinosaurs going extinct where the big ones occupying all the niches that kept mammals to a small size. — Marchesk
Two things. First, your mistake here is that you are considering a tiny counterfactual neighborhood of human evolutionary history. It is unreasonable to suggest that sweat glands or arboreal habitat are a sine qua non for evolving human-like intelligence in any species, just because these factors (allegedly) played an important role the evolution of human intelligence. — SophistiCat
Second, dinosaurs are not extinct. Look out the window and you'll likely see some. When you think of dinosaurs, you might have a picture of comic-book giant reptiles in your imagination; if so, you are seriously underestimating the potential for variety in that lineage. Also, what Bitter Crank said: if you didn't know better, would you expect fish to evolve into something like us? — SophistiCat
This is absolutely necessary for the evolution of human like intelligence. — yatagarasu
Or, more seriously, perhaps it is the Second Law of Thermodynamics that pushes the universe at this point of its evolution to form more and more complex structures, up to and perhaps beyond intelligent life (all to hasten its eventual heat death...) — SophistiCat
Or perhaps dinosaurs could eventually produce a highly intelligent species. If they could produce something as un-dinosaur-like as birds (and some birds are pretty intelligent!), why not? — SophistiCat
There was a Star Trek Voyager episode where they came across advanced aliens who were descendants from Earth's dinosaurs, and left the planet for some reason before the big extinction event.
Birds [evolved reptiles] and reptiles, have two different brains in a line, running in series. — 3rdClassCitizen
Is this topic a philosophical one? — Marchesk
Again, you are only considering a narrow neighborhood of Homo sapiens when judging what is necessary to fulfill a broad requirement. This is a myopic view, as demonstrated by the great variety of adaptations and numerous convergencies that can be seen in life on Earth. Besides, as I said, you are underestimating the potential for variety within a lineage; this is why I brought up birds, some of whom, by the way, move about over much wider ranges than humans ever did for most of their existence - without the benefit of sweat glands. Fish didn't have sweat glands either, and yet here we are. — SophistiCat
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.