JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
By the way, saying "it took 4 billion years to evolve human intelligence" makes as much sense as saying it took 4 billion years to evolve a certain type of virus or parasitic worm.
Personally I think our intelligence is the result of a self-reinforcing feedback loop.Intelligence in any species is for the survival of that species. Mankind seems to have an overkill of the trait. We don't need to be so smart for survival purposes.
Also, saying it took 4 billion years to get humans would imply some sort of linear progression. Evolution does NOT have any particular goal in mind to follow any sort of linear path. There are fits and starts, dead ends and mistakes that are made along the way. The most linear path to us probably only started 30 million years ago.
Is there any organism whose evolution is not a "random accident"? Can you at least say what you mean by "accident" since you deny it has any theological underpinnings?But that's my argument. Our intelligence could well be a random accident of evolution.
And that has nothing to do with the question of whether or not intelligence is common or rare. That's the problem with the backwards thinking of the Rare Earth Theory.If the Earth's history was replayed from day one. What are the chances we would exist exactly as we are? None is my argument.
But that's my argument. Our intelligence could well be a random accident of evolution.
If the Earth's history was replayed from day one. What are the chances we would exist exactly as we are? None is my argument.
But are these laws also responsible for consciousness? That is where the random accident of consciousness or intelligence may be extremely rare.
Some theist sometimes use the argument that the laws of physics are responsible for intelligence existing in the cosmos, and then explain that these laws have been there since before the B/B. In other words they, after many words they inevitabily place their god in the gap just before the B/B as been the source of these laws.
A cop out of natural processes that instead rule out any god.
If the laws of physics are the same everywhere, and the evidence shows that they are, then it will be natural that wherever conditions suit, life will evolve.
But are these laws also responsible for consciousness? That is where the random accident of consciousness or intelligence may be extremely rare.
How can anyone back that up with evidence? No one can until we discover other intelligence that has evolved completely separate from homo sapiens.
The assumption you make in this question is not true. Why do think humans are the only organisms on Earth to have evolved consciousness?Doesn't it strike you as strange why we of all the billions of life forms that have ever lived on this planet are the only ones who have ever evolved consciousness?
Not true. Chimpanzees have the ability to learn human languages.All other lifeforms have only the intelligence to be able to survive.
Who says it's overkill? Humans adapted to live in complex social groups. Stuff like language, face recognition, the ability to infer agency, etc. is hugely adaptive to animals living in such a group. The pay off is that we have radiated to cover most of the Earth. Chimpanzees are on the verge of extinction.Why has homo sapiens such an overkill of brain power if it's just to enable us to survive?
What do you mean by "accident"? You keep using this word as if it had some meaning--as if something things that occurred were accidental but others were not (intentional?)Could it not just be an accident of evolution that may have only have happened in the cosmos once or at best, a dozen or so times?
Nope. Even we would be undetectable to ourselves beyond our solar system. This argument has been shown over and over to be deeply flawed. Why do you keep asserting it?A universe teeming with intelligent life would have made at least one other be discovered by now.
OK. You guys are more than probably right, and I'm wrong. But we cannot ignore the fact that most biologists think our origins are a complete accident of evolution at work.
What recording of Earth history? How could "Earth history" be replayed but without the Earth? (Perhaps you mean if our solar system formed again, there's no guarantee that we'd have the planets we now have.)If the recording of Earth history was replayed, not even the Earth itself could be assured.
I agree that we don't know, but that doesn't mean we're completely ignorant. We know a lot about chemistry and physics. We know that what happened here could happen elsewhere (that is, the same laws apply everywhere and the materials needed for life are among the most abundant in the universe).Also, using Drakes equation, there is either billions of Earths out there, or there could possibly be just one. Until we discover life of some sort that has evolved completely separate from the Earth, we stand at the start of this thread. Completely Ignorant.
How will it "prove" that? You're again making general conclusions waaaaay beyond the data. If we find life on Mars that's not related to Earth, we'll know that abiogenesis happened at least twice. That's not a big shock, though. I've shown you that chemistry adequately explains how you can go from non-living molecules to very simple living things. Once you've got a self-replicating thing (a molecule perhaps in a membrane), natural selection goes to work.Even if we find microbial life on Mars, and it has completely different DNA to Earth-life, then that will be proof that life is widespread in the cosmos and intelligence must exist on perhaps millions of other galaxies.
OK. You guys are more than probably right, and I'm wrong. But we cannot ignore the fact that most biologists think our origins are a complete accident of evolution at work.
If the recording of Earth history was replayed, not even the Earth itself could be assured.
Also, using Drakes equation, there is either billions of Earths out there, or there could possibly be just one. Until we discover life of some sort that has evolved completely separate from the Earth, we stand at the start of this thread. Completely Ignorant.
Even if we find microbial life on Mars, and it has completely different DNA to Earth-life, then that will be proof that life is widespread in the cosmos and intelligence must exist on perhaps millions of other galaxies.
The Drake Equation says no such thing. It simply says that the number of planets that can sustain life is a factor in calculating how many intelligent civilizations there are.Also, using Drakes equation, there is either billions of Earths out there, or there could possibly be just one.
I think amb is reiterating an argument from Stephen Jay Gould, who said that if time were somehow "rewound" back to life's origin, and allowed to play itself out again, it would be extremely unlikely that we would get the same mix and distribution that we have today. It's about divergence from initial conditions.What recording of Earth history? How could "Earth history" be replayed but without the Earth? (Perhaps you mean if our solar system formed again, there's no guarantee that we'd have the planets we now have.)
I think amb is reiterating an argument from Stephen Jay Gould, who said that if time were somehow "rewound" back to life's origin, and allowed to play itself out again, it would be extremely unlikely that we would get the same mix and distribution that we have today. It's about divergence from initial conditions.
Gould, as far as I know, did not postulate that if life replayed like this, intelligence would probably not appear.