Posted by jmercer
Don't get me wrong - I'm very happy we have complex minds. But from an evolutionary perspective, why do we? Once we did fire, club, spear and chipped rock knife - which made us highly successful, survival-wise - why did we continue?
Because no one told us too stop

.
I think a fundamental thing to keep in mind is how we identify what is part of "us" and what is external. Even simple organisms have this ability otherwise they would not be able to react to stimuli. I think this is much more complex and basic to our makeup than it first appears. Obviously there is the macro version of it which would include our consciousness, but it also seems to happen at the microscopic/biological level as well in how our bodies react to external germs. We know where we end, and the external world begins, most of the time. I think that's a fascinating concept.
I think there are different ways of thinking of evolution. I think experience shapes the default wiring of your brains to a certain extent and this could be passed on in some basic sense. To steal an example from Dennett, and probably poorly

, here's an idea. There is a wiring in the brain that relates to a Good Trick (whatever that might be, starting better fires, making better spears). Say its AABBAA. A person with that wiring in their brain is most likely to stumble upon the Good Trick. Others do not have that specific wiring, but wiring can be changed. For example someone who was wired BABBAA would be closer and therefore more likely to discover the Good Trick, than someone wired BBAABB. So within any given community there are numerous individuals with the potential to discover the Good Trick, just with varying likelihoods of success. Over time, more of the people wired AABBAA would likely survive, if the Good Trick worked well than of any other wiring and so it would become more prevalent. It would not necessarily elminate other wirings, but its possible. I think too many people look at it as, here's a community wired AAAAAA, individual wired BBBBBB comes along with an awesome survival mechanism and thus creates ABABAB. While this might happen, it'd also be exceedingly rare I'd think.
So in that vain, its possible that the default makeup of any childs brain might contain more of the wirings that through experience could lead them to a wide array of Good Tricks, even if its not guaranteed. Good Tricks can be all sorts of things, concepts...who knows. They also don't all have to be positive Tricks, we could pass on negative ones as well. But it might give an interesting phenomena when you do experience them. It would seem correct because there are likely many others within your community that could relate to the experience (as they are also hard/wet-wired to likely stumble across them), but it would still feel personal and specific to you because the experience that triggered it is unique to you.
I also think language greatly increased this above process. Language helps a lot with abstract thought because it gives us a greater capacity for internal dialogue. It gives us a more complex way of prompting and posing scenario's to ourselves than any other animal. We also have a much more complex and thus superior ability to predict. To build scenario's and plan and have forethought about what reactions will occur from our actions. We can build scenario's predicting events in the next 10 mins, or an hour, a month, years, toward infinity even. I'd argue no other animal has this sense of internal prediction building on the scale that we do. And I think language plays quite a large part in that.
The redness of red may also fit in here somehow. On one hand red is just a label, and there are different labels and associations for colours across different cultures. While obviously colour results from what is reflected and absorbed by a particular matierial as it pertains to light, its how a particular person's senses interprete that information that ultimately dictates what is experienced by that brains resulting consciousness. Because our brains and senses are on some basic level all similiar its suggestive that what I see as Red is the same thing you see as Red and as your French cousin see's as rouge, despite never being able to directly compare experiences. However, problems with those senses or the makeup of a particular brain can obviously throw this off. Colour blindness, partial blindness, full blindness, and several other vision abnormalities can affect what is perceived by that brain's consciousness. Sometimes what is perceived is varied from the norm, sometimes its absent. I also think there are various ways it can be absent. The senses themselves can be faulty and not actually operate, or in some cases they can work fine in and of themselves, but getting that information worked into the experience of the resulting consciousness gets lost in the mix.
I think that redness is a subjective summation of a more complex association to objective experience. Some of those summations could be passed down through cultural or evolutionary means, but most would be direct experience. I think the feeling of pain, the redness of red seem so abstract to us because our consciousness really isn't privy to the complex processes of the brain. The brain I'd assume would have difficulty representing the entire process of pain to its resultingly produced consciousness, and at the end of the day it just perhaps isn't necessary. So we get subjective summations of these processes instead. Perhaps that's why these types of things are so intuitively hard to grasp when we really try and drill down into them.