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Spider-Dan
Global Moderator
Uber Member
    
Posts: 16583

Bay Area Niner-Hater
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« Reply #4 on: March 10, 2009, 12:38:58 pm » |
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bsmooth is correct. There are plenty of animals that store food for later; squirrels are famous for it. This is one of the first known instances of an animal independently planning for a future mental state (in this case, anger) before it happens. Where are the missing links to our cousins? Every "missing link" that is found just creates two more. Finding the "missing link" is a perpetually moving goalpost. For example: Animal A ------ Animal B ------ Animal C "We found the missing link between A and B!" Animal A --- Animal AA --- Animal B ------ Animal C So where are the missing links between A and AA, and between AA and B? It's a hopeless pursuit.
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SCFinfan
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Posts: 1635

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« Reply #7 on: March 10, 2009, 04:21:14 pm » |
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Do we really have a good enough model of chimp consciousness to say that this is definitive evidence of planning for a future mental state or non-immediate event?
I don't really know whether there's evidence to say that chimps have the same (quality or quantity of) self-awareness as people, such that the observable data leads solely and definitely to the conclusion that the chimp "planned" his rock-throwing. Think of it like this:
We have 2 bits of observable data:
1. rock piling 2. later use of rock piles a. for offensive or safety purposes
Couldn't this very well be a chimp randomly partaking in one activity (rock piling), then later abandoning said activity (perhaps for another activity, like eating), then even later using the products of the earlier activity (the piles of rocks) for then-current purposes (attacking visitors)? That would not imply planning or consideration of future mental states or purposes, but rather would imply blind luck and chance.
I bring this up because it reminds me so much of a dilemma that, I'm told, arhcaeologists and those who study the pre-historic past face. When an archaeologist finds a rock that has been filed down to a point for use as an arrowhead, and they attempt to date it, is there any way to tell whether the arrowhead was made from unimproved material or was a repair (a re-filing, in this case) of previously manufacturered material? Unless the object is one which is known to be in one time period definitively, and not in another, there is no way to tell. The arrowhead that the archaeologist now holds could be the refinement of three larger and duller arrowheads which came before it, and any statement about the date of first manufacture would be difficult to ascertain and the prpduct of pure guesswork. I think the same logic can be applied to this situation as well.
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« Last Edit: March 10, 2009, 04:27:11 pm by SCFinfan »
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