It does seem to me that reasoning backwards from my being intelligent to intelligence being an evolutionary advantage is a bad case of post hoc ergo propter hoc. — tim wood
Given the primordial soup that is the parent of us all, it seems to me that if intelligence (undefined term) were such an advantage, more species would have successfully evolved to and into it — tim wood
Of course, maybe we're not as smart as we think we are - a species wide Dunning-Kruger effect - but instead are just smart enough to be a hazard to all and everything. . — tim wood
I agree with your general thesis " that intelligence is a favorable evolutionary development in organisms and that it gives its possessor an edge in the competition". But I don't think there is a "discontinuity" between animal and human intelligence. The evolution of intelligence seems to be a continuum, with no Gap to be filled with divine intervention. On the other hand, there is a distinction in human intelligence that makes a difference in successful reproduction. Human dominance over all other creatures makes us stand-out against the background of clever-but-limited solutions to the evolutionary algorithm.There's a clear discontinuity in the intelligence spectrum separating humans from the rest of the the animal kingdom. — TheMadFool
But I don't think there is a "discontinuity" between animal and human intelligence. The evolution of intelligence seems to be a continuum, with no Gap to be filled with divine intervention. — Gnomon
That "distinction" can be described in several ways, but I think it comes down to what IQ researchers call "General Intelligence" or "the G factor". Most animals are specialists, and their brains are well adapted to their narrow species niche in the eco-system. But humans have been able to adapt to every niche in this world, and is on the verge of attempting to inhabit exotic worlds, such as the Moon and Mars. So, highly-evolved space-faring aliens might recognize their kinship with the dominant animals on this blue ball — Gnomon
Yes, I think "outlier" is more descriptive of the significance of the human mind, abruptly emerging in the midst of plodding Darwinian evolution. I agree with your intention, but I was thinking of "discontinuity" in terms of gaps. A "spike" is still continuous with the rest of the curve. But an Outlier is an integral part of the curve that is so far from the norm, that it is unpredictable and surprising --- something to be explained by Intention rather than Inertia. Evolution seems to be continuous, but it's occasionally punctuated by sudden unforeseeable emergent phenomena, including Life & Mind.Really? Which other animal has a language as sophisticated like ours, . . . The "discontinuity" in the IQ graph of all animals I was referring to? I don't know if there's a better descriptor than "discontinuity". . . . . I suppose "outlier" is a better word. — TheMadFool
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