Pandora
Premium Member
Of COURSE sociality has a bearing on intelligence, silly... ROFL...
I wouldn't have spent so much of my life studying sociobiology if I didn't think so. But seeing it as the only reason why intelligence would evolve is very closed-minded. I'm offering an alternate theory on why it would evolve, since you asked earlier "how could an asocial, nonparental care organism ever evolve intelligence". And yes, this applies both for mantis and octopi. And once it evolved, if there were no selective pressures against it and only pressures for it, then there would be no need to "explain away" being or not being social.
And on the dogs and sensory interpretation... the example you gave is not what is sensory interpretation is... (I think you have a tendency to define terms with specific biological meaning however you like)... what you're talking about is a secondary, higher cortex function of extrapolation and reasoning BASED on primary cues of sensory interpretation,. Again, these words all have specific meaning in biology and can't be thrown around lightly. On comparison with dogs... I don't know the last time you were able to smell and interpret pheromones, and figure out who they came from, if you've met them before, how old they were and if they were sexually receptive with one sniff. If you could, I think some perfume companies would have a job for you
I wouldn't have spent so much of my life studying sociobiology if I didn't think so. But seeing it as the only reason why intelligence would evolve is very closed-minded. I'm offering an alternate theory on why it would evolve, since you asked earlier "how could an asocial, nonparental care organism ever evolve intelligence". And yes, this applies both for mantis and octopi. And once it evolved, if there were no selective pressures against it and only pressures for it, then there would be no need to "explain away" being or not being social.
And on the dogs and sensory interpretation... the example you gave is not what is sensory interpretation is... (I think you have a tendency to define terms with specific biological meaning however you like)... what you're talking about is a secondary, higher cortex function of extrapolation and reasoning BASED on primary cues of sensory interpretation,. Again, these words all have specific meaning in biology and can't be thrown around lightly. On comparison with dogs... I don't know the last time you were able to smell and interpret pheromones, and figure out who they came from, if you've met them before, how old they were and if they were sexually receptive with one sniff. If you could, I think some perfume companies would have a job for you