More Denton: Another review of Denton's new book (Introduction)

by dhw, Monday, May 30, 2016, 09:20 (3099 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Since when is natural selection a recognition of 'mutual benefit'? Bacteria don't think.-dhw: As usual, you state your opinion as if it were a fact. Natural selection does not preclude thought!-DAVID: Natural selection is affected by thinking animals like us, and to a less extent by lesser animals. Not in plants.-According to you there are no thinking animals “like us”, and we arrived billions of years after natural selection began. Nobody knows the extent to which “lesser” organisms think, but it is not unreasonable to assume that “lesser” organisms are able to recognize relationships that are beneficial to them.-dhw: Why should cells in communities be able to think for themselves and communicate with one another, but single cells can't?-DAVID: Because single cells have automatic functions, while multicellulars have specialized networks of cells that allow thought.-Multicellulars consist of single cells working together! All organisms, unicellular and multicellular, have automatic functions, but nobody knows to what extent single cells can think (which does not mean think "like us").


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