For Matt: Corvids are amazing (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, June 29, 2011, 15:28 (4679 days ago)

For Matt: Corvids are amazing

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, July 02, 2011, 14:01 (4676 days ago) @ David Turell

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-bird-brained-clever-crows-recognise.html-I knew Crows could at least differentiate between the numbers 1-4 and do some addition as well. I didn't have any idea they recognized faces. This is a great article, and it brings to mind another question. -Has anyone explored the idea of self-directed evolution as an explanation for Man's rapid advance? Lets not also forget that we used not have the same care for human life--Sparta comes to mind with its practice of infanticide. -I bring this up because of the recent reports coming from a long-term study of domesticating foxes in Russia. Simple selection made drastic differences between tame and wild foxes. How much has unnatural selection played in our own history?

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

For Matt: Corvids are amazing

by David Turell @, Saturday, July 02, 2011, 15:00 (4676 days ago) @ xeno6696

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-bird-brained-clever-crows-recognise.html
&a... 
> I knew Crows could at least differentiate between the numbers 1-4 and do some addition as well. I didn't have any idea they recognized faces. This is a great article, and it brings to mind another question. 
> 
> Has anyone explored the idea of self-directed evolution as an explanation for Man's rapid advance? Lets not also forget that we used not have the same care for human life--Sparta comes to mind with its practice of infanticide. -
I've said all along that DNA, from the beginning, is directed toward humans.

For Matt: Corvids are amazing

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, July 02, 2011, 15:44 (4676 days ago) @ David Turell

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-bird-brained-clever-crows-recognise.html
&a... > 
> > I knew Crows could at least differentiate between the numbers 1-4 and do some addition as well. I didn't have any idea they recognized faces. This is a great article, and it brings to mind another question. 
> > 
> > Has anyone explored the idea of self-directed evolution as an explanation for Man's rapid advance? Lets not also forget that we used not have the same care for human life--Sparta comes to mind with its practice of infanticide. 
> 
> 
> I've said all along that DNA, from the beginning, is directed toward humans.-You missed my point...-I'm asking that at a point where man reaches an appreciable level of sentience, we took control of our own destiny. Both by accident (moving to northern climes) and on purpose (Sparta). -I think it would be equally fair to say that we are only a stepping stone to something greater. I see no reason to assume Man is the "end" of evolution. It's entirely possible that Man isn't the end goal at all. Anthropomorphic thinking.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

For Matt: Corvids are amazing

by David Turell @, Saturday, July 02, 2011, 17:42 (4676 days ago) @ xeno6696


> I think it would be equally fair to say that we are only a stepping stone to something greater. I see no reason to assume Man is the "end" of evolution. It's entirely possible that Man isn't the end goal at all. Anthropomorphic thinking.-I don't disagree. Humans could definitely be better than we are.

For Matt: Corvids are amazing

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 10, 2012, 13:50 (4210 days ago) @ xeno6696

The latest studies show better 3-D vision in the way the eyes are set.-http://phys.org/news/2012-10-clever-crow-bird-brain.html

Clever Corvids

by David Turell @, Tuesday, February 05, 2013, 20:00 (4091 days ago) @ David Turell

Great review article:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/thoughtful-animal/2013/02/04/six-things-you-didnt-know-about-ravens-superbowl-edition/?WT_mc_id=SA_DD_20130205

Clever Corvids

by David Turell @, Sunday, December 01, 2013, 05:56 (3793 days ago) @ David Turell

More studies on how clever crow are with brains diffrent than ours:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/11/131128103835.htm-more convergence.

Clever Corvids: patience

by David Turell @, Tuesday, March 11, 2014, 18:58 (3692 days ago) @ David Turell

Waiting for better food:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/mind-guest-blog/2014/03/10/self-controlled-crows-ace-the-marshmallow-test/

Clever Corvids: beckedness

by David Turell @, Friday, December 05, 2014, 01:48 (3424 days ago) @ David Turell

They prefer using the beak on the right or left side!-http://phys.org/news/2014-12-tool-wielding-crows-left-right-beaked.html

Clever Corvids: vs. two-year olds

by David Turell @, Saturday, December 13, 2014, 18:53 (3415 days ago) @ David Turell

The kids win:-http://www.wsj.com/articles/who-wins-when-smart-crows-and-kids-match-wits-1418230699?KEYWORDS=Alison+Gopnik-Here was the question: Would the crows or the children be able to use this accidental event to design a new action? Could they imagine how to procure the treat on purpose, even though they had never done it before? If they just saw the block sitting on the table, would they pick it up and put it in the machine?-Despite their tool-using brilliance, the crows never got it—even after a hundred trials. They could learn to pick up the block and put it into the box through conditioning—that is, if they were rewarded for each step of the process—but not spontaneously. In contrast, most of the 2-year-olds learned from the accident. They could imagine how to get the marble, and could immediately pick up the block and put it in the box.-The crows have a deep understanding of how physical objects work, and they are very clever at using that knowledge to accomplish their goals. But the children seem to be better at noticing the novel, the accidental and the serendipitous and at using that experience to imagine new opportunities. It may be that same ability which lets us humans fashion ancient mountains and lakes into magical new worlds.

Clever Corvids: analytic thinking

by David Turell @, Tuesday, February 10, 2015, 19:43 (3356 days ago) @ David Turell

Crows can do it:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/crows-understand-analogies/?WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20150210-"Then, the critical test was given. Each card now pictured a pair of items. The middle card would display pairs AA or CD, and the two side cards would display pair BB and pair EF. The relation between one pair of items must be appreciated and then applied to a new pair of items to generate the correct answer: the BB card in the case of AA or the EF card in the case of CD. For instance, if the middle card displayed a circle and a cross, then the correct choice would be the side card containing a square and a triangle rather than the side card containing two squares.-"Not only could the crows correctly perform this task, but they did so spontaneously, from the very first presentations, without ever being trained to do so.-"It seems that initial training to match identical items enabled the crows to grasp a broadly applicable concept of sameness that could apply to the novel two-item analogy task. Such robust and uninstructed behavior represents the most convincing evidence yet of analogical reasoning in a non-primate animal, as only apes had spontaneously shown analogical reasoning after learning to match identical items."

Clever Corvids: clever Mexican jays

by David Turell @, Saturday, May 23, 2015, 17:43 (3255 days ago) @ David Turell

Weighing peanut pods to get the right meal:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150522174719.htm-"When we presented the jays with ten empty and ten full identically looking pods (pods without or with three nuts inside), we noticed that after picking them up the birds rejected the empty ones and accepted the full peanuts, without opening them." says Dr. Sang-im Lee of Seoul National University -- the corresponding author of the paper. A series of similar experiments with identically looking normal nuts and nuts that were 1g heavier (pods with some clay added) confirmed that jays always were able to distinguish and preferred the heavier nuts. How did they know which were empty without opening them? The researchers used slow motion videos to see what happens when the bird is deciding whether to drop or take away the peanut pod. "We found out that birds shake the nuts in their beaks. We think that these movements may provide them with the information generally similar to our feeling of "heaviness" when we handle an object in our hands," says Dr. Jablonski.-"In another experiment the researchers prepared one type of peanut pods by opening the shell, removing two out of the three nuts and closing the shell again. The second type of pod was prepared by opening a small pod, which normally contains only one nut, and closing it. Thus, the jays were to choose between nuts of similar content and mass but of different size. "The jays figured out that the larger pods did not weigh as much as they should and the birds preferred the smaller pods, which weighed as expected for their size," comments Dr. Fuszara. They behaved as if they knew that "something is wrong" with the larger nuts.-"So how do they know it? When they shake the nuts in their beaks, the birds produce sounds by opening and closing their beaks around the peanut shell for brief moments. The researchers think that the jays also take this sound into account. "Our next goal is to disentangle the role of sound relative to the perception of "heaviness," and to determine if jays use the same sensory cues for acorns -- their natural food," conclude Dr. Lee and Dr Jablonski."

Clever Corvids: keeping count

by David Turell @, Tuesday, June 09, 2015, 18:02 (3238 days ago) @ David Turell

Crows definitely keep count:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150608152002.htm-"Helen Ditz and Professor Andreas Nieder of the University of Tübingen found the neuronal basis of this numerical ability in crows. They trained crows to discriminate groups of dots. During performance, the team recorded the responses of individual neurons in an integrative area of the crow endbrain. This area also receives inputs from the visual system. The neurons ignore the dots' size, shape and arrangement and only extract their number. Each cell's response peaks at its respective preferred number.-"The study published in PNAS provides valuable insights into the biological roots of counting capabilities. "When a crow looks at three dots, grains or hunters, single neurons recognize the groups' 'threeness' ," says Helen Ditz. "This discovery shows that the ability to deal with abstract numerical concepts can be traced back to individual nerve cells in corvids." -"What makes this finding even more interesting is that a long evolutionary history separates us from birds. As a consequence, the brains of crows and humans are designed very differently."

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Saturday, August 29, 2015, 00:08 (3157 days ago) @ David Turell

It seems they learn by some degree of emulation and trial and error:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/08/150826113817.htm-"She designed the experiment based on apparatus used by University of Leeds zoologist Will Hoppitt in a similar study he conducted on meerkats. "I used two apparatuses with multiple access points on each," she said, "so we could look at whether the crows were imitating or emulating, whether they were just paying attention to another crow's general location or whether they were paying attention to a specific area on an apparatus that another crow was interacting with."-"Logan and colleagues found that the crows don't imitate or copy actions at all. "So there goes that theory," she said. "Assuming how they learn in a non-tool context carries over to a tool context, they wouldn't copy the actions of individuals they see cutting up Pandanus leaves to make tools."-"But Logan and her team did strong evidence of social learning: If one crow sees a companion interacting with a particular area of the apparatus, reaching its bill through a door and pulling out a piece of boiled egg -- the treat -- the former is far more likely to try that particular door on either apparatus before choosing the other access options.-"'It's called stimulus enhancement," she explained. "That's the social learning mechanism they're using. But there's another interesting aspect: Once they see another bird interact with the door, they go to that door and then begin to solve the problem on their own. And now they completely ignore social information and they just use trial and error learning to open the door and extract the food.'"-Comment: Tool use has to be learned. It is not programmed as an instinct.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Saturday, August 29, 2015, 08:45 (3157 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by dhw, Saturday, August 29, 2015, 08:51

DAVID: It seems they learn by some degree of emulation and trial and error:> -http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/08/150826113817.htm
 
 
"Logan and colleagues found that the crows don't imitate or copy actions at all. -"But Logan and her team did find strong evidence of social learning: -"It's called stimulus enhancement," she explained. "That's the social learning mechanism they're using. But there's another interesting aspect: Once they see another bird interact with the door, they go to that door and then begin to solve the problem on their own. And now they completely ignore social information and they just use trial and error learning to open the door and extract the food.'" -David's comment: Tool use has to be learned. It is not programmed as an instinct.-In other words, crows follow the same procedures as we do: they learn from one another, and they also use their own intelligence to solve problems. Why would they have started using tools in the first place if they weren't intelligent? And other scientists in a different field tell us that although bacteria don't have the physical means to use tools as such, they still have the intelligence to solve problems. And yet for some reason, there are folk who insist that corvid problem-solving is "not programmed as an instinct", whereas bacterial problem-solving is. Strange, isn't it?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Saturday, August 29, 2015, 14:21 (3157 days ago) @ dhw


> David's comment: Tool use has to be learned. It is not programmed as an instinct.
> 
> dhw: In other words, crows follow the same procedures as we do: they learn from one another, and they also use their own intelligence to solve problems. Why would they have started using tools in the first place if they weren't intelligent? -Of course clever corvids are intelligent compared to other birds.-> dhw: And other scientists in a different field tell us that although bacteria don't have the physical means to use tools as such, they still have the intelligence to solve problems. And yet for some reason, there are folk who insist that corvid problem-solving is "not programmed as an instinct", whereas bacterial problem-solving is. Strange, isn't it?-Who said bacteria follow instincts in their behaviour? Bacteria use programmed biochemical responses. Instincts do appear to be programmed behaviour in conscious animals, but we don't know how it works.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Sunday, August 30, 2015, 21:26 (3155 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: And other scientists in a different field tell us that although bacteria don't have the physical means to use tools as such, they still have the intelligence to solve problems. And yet for some reason, there are folk who insist that corvid problem-solving is "not programmed as an instinct", whereas bacterial problem-solving is. Strange, isn't it?-DAVID: Who said bacteria follow instincts in their behaviour? Bacteria use programmed biochemical responses. Instincts do appear to be programmed behaviour in conscious animals, but we don't know how it works.-Please explain how you can tell the difference between programmed biochemical responses, programmed behaviour, and instinct. And when corvids and bacteria solve problems, please explain how you can tell the difference between intelligent behaviour and programmed biochemical responses. Ah, sorry, you have already said you can't. You just happen to know that corvids are intelligent and bacteria are not.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Sunday, August 30, 2015, 23:29 (3155 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: You just happen to know that corvids are intelligent and bacteria are not.-Anyone with a brain can do a bit of thinking. Bacteria?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Monday, August 31, 2015, 19:24 (3154 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You just happen to know that corvids are intelligent and bacteria are not.
 -DAVID: Anyone with a brain can do a bit of thinking. Bacteria?-Isn't it amazing that experts like Margulis, Shapiro, McClintock, Albrecht-Buehler etc. never thought of that! Or could it just be that there are different forms of intelligence, and bacteria have different means of thinking? -It's also interesting that in your correspondence with Romansh you continue to refer to NDEs as possible evidence that thought can be independent of the brain. (I'm not dismissing that argument - simply pointing out the inconsistency.) After all, if God exists, one presumes he can think, but does one also presume he has a brain?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 01, 2015, 01:39 (3154 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: You just happen to know that corvids are intelligent and bacteria are not.
> 
> 
> DAVID: Anyone with a brain can do a bit of thinking. Bacteria?
> 
> dhw: Isn't it amazing that experts like Margulis, Shapiro, McClintock, Albrecht-Buehler etc. never thought of that! Or could it just be that there are different forms of intelligence, and bacteria have different means of thinking? -Pray tell, how?- 
> 
> Dhw: It's also interesting that in your correspondence with Romansh you continue to refer to NDEs as possible evidence that thought can be independent of the brain. (I'm not dismissing that argument - simply pointing out the inconsistency.) After all, if God exists, one presumes he can think, but does one also presume he has a brain?-Not thought, but consciousness can be independent. Thought is a product of consciousness. I view consciousness as an entity all by itself, whether produced by the brain or received by the brain.

Clever Corvids - consciousness derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Tuesday, September 01, 2015, 13:51 (3154 days ago) @ David Turell

Not thought, but consciousness can be independent. Thought is a product of consciousness. I view consciousness as an entity all by itself, whether produced by the brain or received by the brain.
So you can be conscious without thought?-You seem to have more in common with Zen meditators than I thought or was conscious of.-And what is intelligence? Is it related to consciousness or is it solely a product of thought?

Clever Corvids - consciousness derail

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 01, 2015, 20:36 (3153 days ago) @ romansh

David: Not thought, but consciousness can be independent. Thought is a product of consciousness. I view consciousness as an entity all by itself, whether produced 
by the brain or received by the brain.-> Romansh: So you can be conscious without thought?-That is how I go to sleep. I stop thinking and turn off the voices in my mind.
> 
> Romansh: You seem to have more in common with Zen meditators than I thought or was conscious of.
> 
> And what is intelligence? Is it related to consciousness or is it solely a product of thought?- Higher Intelligence is partially made up from the memory of learned facts and a good ability at integration and analysis of what is learned or can be learned.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Tuesday, September 01, 2015, 16:25 (3154 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You just happen to know that corvids are intelligent and bacteria are not.
DAVID: Anyone with a brain can do a bit of thinking. Bacteria?
dhw: Isn't it amazing that experts like Margulis, Shapiro, McClintock, Albrecht-Buehler etc. never thought of that! Or could it just be that there are different forms of intelligence, and bacteria have different means of thinking? -DAVID: Pray tell, how?-We don't even understand how our own thoughts are produced (see below), so you can hardly expect me to explain how a bacterium thinks! I'm still waiting to hear how the first cells and their descendants managed to pass down divine computer programmes for billions of innovations and lifestyles over billions of years and organisms through all the random catastrophes that might have destroyed them, but that particular “how” doesn't seem to bother you.-Dhw: It's also interesting that in your correspondence with Romansh you continue to refer to NDEs as possible evidence that thought can be independent of the brain. (I'm not dismissing that argument - simply pointing out the inconsistency.) After all, if God exists, one presumes he can think, but does one also presume he has a brain?-DAVID: Not thought, but consciousness can be independent. Thought is a product of consciousness. I view consciousness as an entity all by itself, whether produced by the brain or received by the brain.-If consciousness is produced by the brain, how can it be an entity all by itself? Consciousness is not an external object but an ongoing interior process, as is thought. And if thought is a product of consciousness, then when the producer of consciousness dies, the product of consciousness should die as well. But that is precisely what NDEs contradict: the brain is dead but consciousness survives and thoughts are still produced. In that case, consciousness and thought cannot be produced by the brain. Your dualism depends on the brain being a receiver, not a producer. And if consciousness is an entity all by itself, and if animals, birds and insects have consciousness (though not on the same level as our own), why should it not be the same for bacteria?
 
I am not myself arguing for or against dualism. The “emergence” of thought from chemical interactions is another explanation - with the product being greater than the sum of its parts. But if this is so for humans, it can also be so for bacteria, even without a brain.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 00:33 (3153 days ago) @ dhw
edited by David Turell, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 01:11

dhw: I'm still waiting to hear how the first cells and their descendants managed to pass down divine computer programmes for billions of innovations and lifestyles over billions of years and organisms through all the random catastrophes that might have destroyed them, but that particular “how” doesn't seem to bother you.-Since DNA and the rest of the genome is a multilayered code, there is plenty of room for all the instructions.
> 
> dhw: If consciousness is produced by the brain, how can it be an entity all by itself? Consciousness is not an external object but an ongoing interior process, as is thought. And if thought is a product of consciousness, then when the producer of consciousness dies, the product of consciousness should die as well. But that is precisely what NDEs contradict: the brain is dead but consciousness survives and thoughts are still produced. In that case, consciousness and thought cannot be produced by the brain. Your dualism depends on the brain being a receiver, not a producer.-I understand that. By 'entity' I meant a special emergent production, and although I favor the receiver concept, I not sure enough of it to exclude brain production which can somehow survive clinical brain death once it is produced by the brain.-> dhw: And if consciousness is an entity all by itself, and if animals, birds and insects have consciousness (though not on the same level as our own), why should it not be the same for bacteria?-Because I think any degree of consciousness requires a brain. Because our consciousness is different than the organisms to which you refer. We have a consciousness which can foresee and plan for the future. Most animal research shows they live in the moment, with very little aspect of future planning found. As for your favorite bacteria, they respond immediately, only in the moment. This is the point you miss.
> 
> dhw: I am not myself arguing for or against dualism. The “emergence” of thought from chemical interactions is another explanation - with the product being greater than the sum of its parts. But if this is so for humans, it can also be so for bacteria, even without a brain.-I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 00:51 (3153 days ago) @ David Turell

I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.-Yes, but does intelligence require neurons?

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 01:06 (3153 days ago) @ romansh

David: I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.
> 
> Romansh: Yes, but does intelligence require neurons?-Yes. What dhw keeps referring to is the actions of bacteria operating biochemical reactions under the control of intelligent information.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 01:23 (3153 days ago) @ David Turell

David: I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.
> > 
> > Romansh: Yes, but does intelligence require neurons?
> 
> Yes. What dhw keeps referring to is the actions of bacteria operating biochemical reactions under the control of intelligent information.-And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 04:28 (3153 days ago) @ romansh


> Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?-No.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 13:39 (3153 days ago) @ David Turell


> > Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?
> 
> No.
Interesting ... neurons are not a requirement for intelligence. 
Thank you.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 14:06 (3153 days ago) @ romansh


> > > Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?
> > 
> > David: No.
> Romansh: Interesting ... neurons are not a requirement for intelligence. 
> Thank you.-Not when we are discussing the supernatural

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 01:32 (3152 days ago) @ David Turell


> > > > Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?
> > > 
> > > David: No.
> > Romansh: Interesting ... neurons are not a requirement for intelligence. 
> > Thank you.
> 
> Not when we are discussing the supernatural
So by definition we are talking about the unknowable and our discussion is based on an argument from ignorance.-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 04:44 (3152 days ago) @ romansh


> > > > > Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?
> > > > 
> > > > David: No.
> > > Romansh: Interesting ... neurons are not a requirement for intelligence. 
> > > Thank you.
> > 
> > David: Not when we are discussing the supernatural
> Romansh: So by definition we are talking about the unknowable and our discussion is based on an argument from ignorance.
> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance-You are the one who brought up the 'intelligence that designs the universe' in this discussion.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by romansh ⌂ @, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 04:46 (3152 days ago) @ David Turell


> > > > > > Romansh: And what about the intelligence that "designs" the universe, does that too require neurons?
> > > > > 
> > > > > David: No.
> > > > Romansh: Interesting ... neurons are not a requirement for intelligence. 
> > > > Thank you.
> > > 
> > > David: Not when we are discussing the supernatural
> > Romansh: So by definition we are talking about the unknowable and our discussion is based on an argument from ignorance.
> > 
> > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argument_from_ignorance
> 
> You are the one who brought up the 'intelligence that designs the universe' in this discussion.-And?
I don't claim there is a supernatural.

Clever Corvids: intelligence derail

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 14:46 (3152 days ago) @ romansh


> > David: You are the one who brought up the 'intelligence that designs the universe' in this discussion.
> 
> Romansh: And?
> I don't claim there is a supernatural.-Meant as a facetious comment?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 20:23 (3152 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by dhw, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 20:34

dhw: I'm still waiting to hear how the first cells and their descendants managed to pass down divine computer programmes for billions of innovations and lifestyles over billions of years and organisms through all the random catastrophes that might have destroyed them, but that particular “how” doesn't seem to bother you.-DAVID: Since DNA and the rest of the genome is a multilayered code, there is plenty of room for all the instructions.-Plenty of room for billions of preprogrammed innovations and lifestyles to cope with all those random environmental changes and lead from bacteria to humans via dinosaurs, the duckbilled platypus and the wasp that lays its eggs on a spider's back. All contained in a tiny globule. If there's room for all that, maybe you can find room for an autonomous, inventive, intelligent mechanism that works out its own programmes as the need or opportunity arises.-dhw: If consciousness is produced by the brain, how can it be an entity all by itself? Consciousness is not an external object but an ongoing interior process, as is thought. And if thought is a product of consciousness, then when the producer of consciousness dies, the product of consciousness should die as well. But that is precisely what NDEs contradict: the brain is dead but consciousness survives and thoughts are still produced. In that case, consciousness and thought cannot be produced by the brain. Your dualism depends on the brain being a receiver, not a producer.-DAVID: I understand that. By 'entity' I meant a special emergent production, and although I favor the receiver concept, I not sure enough of it to exclude brain production which can somehow survive clinical brain death once it is produced by the brain.-If you view consciousness as an “entity all by itself”, it has to exist independently of the brain! As I have said below, “emergence” is another explanation, but that only stresses its dependence on what it emerges from. Your key word of course is “somehow”. That is why I complain about double standards, as in the exchange below:-Dhw: ...could it just be that there are different forms of intelligence, and bacteria have different means of thinking? 
DAVID: Pray tell, how?-dhw: And if consciousness is an entity all by itself, and if animals, birds and insects have consciousness (though not on the same level as our own), why should it not be the same for bacteria?-DAVID: Because I think any degree of consciousness requires a brain. Because our consciousness is different than the organisms to which you refer. We have a consciousness which can foresee and plan for the future. Most animal research shows they live in the moment, with very little aspect of future planning found. As for your favorite bacteria, they respond immediately, only in the moment. This is the point you miss.-I can assure you I am perfectly aware of the colossal differences between our intelligence/consciousness and that of baboons, butterflies and bacteria. That is what I mean by “not on the same level as our own”. But in my view the ability to process information, take decisions and solve the vast range of problems posed by an ever changing environment still requires intelligence/consciousness. You acknowledge gradations of consciousness when we discuss animals and birds, and have even somewhat grudgingly acknowledged that my pet ants may have some degree of it, but...see below. -dhw: I am not myself arguing for or against dualism. The “emergence” of thought from chemical interactions is another explanation - with the product being greater than the sum of its parts. But if this is so for humans, it can also be so for bacteria, even without a brain.
DAVID: I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.-And quite clearly there are many experts in the field who disagree with you, which is why I always find the firmness of your opinion so puzzling!

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 22:16 (3152 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: The “emergence” of thought from chemical interactions is another explanation - with the product being greater than the sum of its parts. But if this is so for humans, it can also be so for bacteria, even without a brain.[/i]
> DAVID: I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.
> 
> dhw: And quite clearly there are many experts in the field who disagree with you, which is why I always find the firmness of your opinion so puzzling!-As I explained to Romansh, I was trained as a bio-mechanic in medical school. As a result I am very conversant with the function of kidney cells. They do amazing things on their own and in response to nerve and chemical (hormone) stimulation. So much so that blood tests for those items regulated by kidney cells stay in tight ranges, better than the thinking neurologist can provide with his dialysis machines. Granted these cells don't have to scrounge for food along with their other tasks, but I equate those cells abilities with the tasks required of bacteria to maintain independent life. In medical school there was nary the thought that kidney cells think. -On the other hand Shapiro (whose work I much admire) is immersed in the mono-cellular world, and I would love to meet with him and challenge his statements about bacterial intelligence, based on the biochemistry of cells in the multicellular world. After all multicellularity arose from his world and his favorite cells. I don't think there is much if any change in those intelligent cellular reactions. Evolution is a continuum. I firmly stand by my reasoning. I am sorry you are so puzzled.

Clever Corvids: responsese without neurons

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 02, 2015, 22:57 (3152 days ago) @ David Turell

This study of a simple marine animal without neurons is an example of how simple chemical responses can control an animal's feeding technique:-http://phys.org/news/2015-09-animal-synapses-external-digestion-global.html-"They observed that when Trichoplax glides over a patch of algae, its cilia stop beating and it ceases moving, which indicates its ability to control its the entire body. The authors then found that cells of a certain cell type, called lipophils, simultaneously secretes granules whose contents rapidly break down the algae. This secretion appears to be targeted, indicating that the organism has local control, as only lipophils near algae released the granules. Trichoplax also appeared to pause while the algal content was ingested, and then resumed gliding. "- Comment: All of this can be mediate d by chemically sensing the presence of algae, and chemically signaling the feeding process.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 21:25 (3151 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: I'm of the firm opinion that thought requires neurons.
dhw: And quite clearly there are many experts in the field who disagree with you, which is why I always find the firmness of your opinion so puzzling!-DAVID: As I explained to Romansh, I was trained as a bio-mechanic in medical school. As a result I am very conversant with the function of kidney cells. They do amazing things on their own and in response to nerve and chemical (hormone) stimulation. So much so that blood tests for those items regulated by kidney cells stay in tight ranges, better than the thinking neurologist can provide with his dialysis machines. Granted these cells don't have to scrounge for food along with their other tasks, but I equate those cells abilities with the tasks required of bacteria to maintain independent life. In medical school there was nary the thought that kidney cells think. -You keep referring to an established community in which cells must stick to their assigned role or there will be disruption (here, disease). I have focused on bacterial intelligence in order to find an explanation for the INNOVATIONS that drive evolution. The cells of the kidney community won't invent something new. Their community WAS the something new. The inventive mechanism will only come into play when there are new conditions to master or exploit. And so if single-celled bacteria are intelligent, as Shapiro and Co maintain, it could be that other cells/cell communities combine their intelligences to invent (or adapt, or perish if their intelligence can't cope). It is an alternative to billions of random mutations, or billions of divine computer programmes, and it would also explain the higgledy-piggledy history of evolution.
 
DAVID: On the other hand Shapiro (whose work I much admire) is immersed in the mono-cellular world, and I would love to meet with him and challenge his statements about bacterial intelligence, based on the biochemistry of cells in the multicellular world. After all multicellularity arose from his world and his favorite cells. I don't think there is much if any change in those intelligent cellular reactions. Evolution is a continuum. I firmly stand by my reasoning. I am sorry you are so puzzled.-But we have agreed that evolution is not a continuum. There are jumps, because innovations break the continuum. Multicellularity has led to every single feature that distinguishes you and me from bacteria, and every innovation required multiple changes, intelligently integrated with all the other cell communities that made up the respective organism. But you know this as well as I do. However, perhaps it is vital for you to believe that cells/cell communities are automatons, because that would mean they couldn't change themselves, and so only God could change them. Might it be, then, that you are so firmly opposed to Shapiro and Co because cellular intelligence (even if it was created by your God) would put paid to your particular theory of divinely planned and preprogrammed anthropocentric evolution?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 03, 2015, 22:32 (3151 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: You keep referring to an established community in which cells must stick to their assigned role or there will be disruption (here, disease). I have focused on bacterial intelligence in order to find an explanation for the INNOVATIONS that drive evolution. The cells of the kidney community won't invent something new.-It appears you have missed the point I am making. I am comparing single kidney cells (there are several types), which can do prodigious very complex functions all automatically, with the tasks of single cell bacteria, to point out that bacterial life can easily proceed automatically. And kidney cells do it with no evidence of thought. The fact that bacteria seem to react thoughtfully to stimuli in no way suggests they can thoughtfully plan an innovation. -> 
> dhw: But we have agreed that evolution is not a continuum. There are jumps, because innovations break the continuum.-A continuum can have jumps. You are back to touting itty-bitty Darwin steps.-> dhw: However, perhaps it is vital for you to believe that cells/cell communities are automatons, because that would mean they couldn't change themselves, and so only God could change them. Might it be, then, that you are so firmly opposed to Shapiro and Co because cellular intelligence (even if it was created by your God) would put paid to your particular theory of divinely planned and preprogrammed anthropocentric evolution?-Of course God is a component of my thought. And of course, if God put semi-autonomous inventive intelligence into single cells, I'm fine with that.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Friday, September 04, 2015, 13:51 (3151 days ago) @ David Turell

Another example of automatic action by human single cells. In infection or inflammation from injury cells called neutrophils arrive and guide the action to kill the infective agent or repair the wound:-http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/43917/title/Neutrophils-Lead--T-Cells-Follow/-"Part of the innate immune system, white blood cells called neutrophils circulate in the blood and are the first responders to an influenza respiratory infection, guiding T cells—part of the adaptive immune response—to the site. Neutrophils create a physical trail of chemokines that allow T cells to home in on the infection site, according to a study published today (September 3) in Science.-"Using two-photon microscopy, Minsoo Kim, an immunologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York and his colleagues visualized the mobilization of immune cells in response to an influenza virus-infection in the mouse trachea. The study is the first to track an immune system response to a flu virus in vivo.-“'The paper goes very far, using an infection model to not only describe a phenomenon, but to clarify the molecular cascade of events in impressive detail,”-***-"While the types of immune cells and their individual functions are increasingly well defined, how these cells interact and work together to fight pathogens has been difficult to study in live animals. It is well established that immune cells communicate with one another and with other tissues through messenger molecules called chemokines and cytokines. Cytokine messenger molecules made by innate immune cells in the blood are thought to help trigger T cells to differentiate into pathogen-specific killer cells. Chemokines guide immune cells to a site of infection. Both infected tissues and immune cells secrete chemokines, yet how cells follow the trails of these immune cell-secreted peptides has not been clear.-***-"For Kim, the phenomenon he and his colleagues have uncovered highlights the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell. “This is individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function,” he said." (my bold)-Comment: These are thinking cells just like Shapiro describes. All the information to act is built in.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Friday, September 04, 2015, 19:03 (3151 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You keep referring to an established community in which cells must stick to their assigned role or there will be disruption (here, disease). I have focused on bacterial intelligence in order to find an explanation for the INNOVATIONS that drive evolution. The cells of the kidney community won't invent something new.-DAVID: It appears you have missed the point I am making. I am comparing single kidney cells (there are several types), which can do prodigious very complex functions all automatically, with the tasks of single cell bacteria, to point out that bacterial life can easily proceed automatically. And kidney cells do it with no evidence of thought. The fact that bacteria seem to react thoughtfully to stimuli in no way suggests they can thoughtfully plan an innovation.-I had drafted a reply to this, to the effect that I've no idea how much “thinking” kidney cells might do as members playing a specific role in an established community, unlike bacteria which fend for themselves and solve all kinds of problems as they cope with all kinds of environments. However, your latest post concerning injury cells is a revealing one, so see further down. -dhw: But we have agreed that evolution is not a continuum. There are jumps, because innovations break the continuum.
DAVID: A continuum can have jumps. You are back to touting itty-bitty Darwin steps.-A continuum can't have jumps! “Continuum: a scale of related things on which each one is only slightly different from the one before” - Longman Dic. of Contemporary English. That perfectly describes the continuum advocated by Darwin, who said that nature did not jump: “Natura non facit saltum” (Difficulties on Theory).-dhw: However, perhaps it is vital for you to believe that cells/cell communities are automatons, because that would mean they couldn't change themselves, and so only God could change them. Might it be, then, that you are so firmly opposed to Shapiro and Co because cellular intelligence (even if it was created by your God) would put paid to your particular theory of divinely planned and preprogrammed anthropocentric evolution?
DAVID: Of course God is a component of my thought. And of course, if God put semi-autonomous inventive intelligence into single cells, I'm fine with that.-Back you go to your meaningless “semi-autonomous”. Either he preprogrammed the innovations or he didn't. And either he dabbled (which includes separate creation)or he didn't. If he didn't preprogramme or dabble the innovations, and allowing for the fact that organisms are restricted by their own limitations and those of the environment, you are left with random mutations or cellular autonomy. 
 
Xxxxx-DAVID: Another example of automatic action by human single cells. In infection or inflammation from injury cells called neutrophils arrive and guide the action to kill the infective agent or repair the wound:-http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/43917/title/Neutrophils-Lead--T-C...
 
QUOTE: "For Kim, the phenomenon he and his colleagues have uncovered highlights the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell. This is individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function,” he said." (David's bold)-David's comment: These are thinking cells just like Shapiro describes. All the information to act is built in.-You begin by calling it “automatic action”, and you end by saying the "information to act" is built in. The article does not mention automatism - though it describes the mechanics of cellular communication - and it does not mention built-in "information to act". On the contrary, it stresses that such collective behaviour and shared information are common to animal species and individual cells. You acknowledge this cooperative behaviour in animals as being intelligent, but you refuse to accept it in cells. Now these experts are telling you it's the same. The intelligence may be built in (and may have been put there by your God), but the information is passed around, processed and acted upon through cells communicating and cooperating, just like animals. Yes, indeed, these are also the thinking cells Shapiro describes as cognitive, sentient, decision-making beings.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Friday, September 04, 2015, 21:58 (3150 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: A continuum can't have jumps! “Continuum: a scale of related things on which each one is only slightly different from the one before” - Longman Dic. of Contemporary English. -I bow before your more perfect use of English. I simply meant a continuous process.-> 
> dhw: Back you go to your meaningless “semi-autonomous”. Either he preprogrammed the innovations or he didn't. -Semi-autonomous is 'largely self-governing' in my Webster's Collegiate dictionary, which fits my theistic evolution concepts. Organisms have much innovative freedom as long as they fit God's desires. 
> 
> Xxxxx
> 
> DAVID: Another example of automatic action by human single cells. In infection or inflammation from injury cells called neutrophils arrive and guide the action to kill the infective agent or repair the wound:
> 
> http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/43917/title/Neutrophils-Lead--T-C... 
> QUOTE: "For Kim, the phenomenon he and his colleagues have uncovered highlights the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell. This is individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function,” he said." (David's bold)
> 
> David's comment: These are thinking cells just like Shapiro describes. All the information to act is built in.
> 
> dhw: You begin by calling it “automatic action”, and you end by saying the "information to act" is built in. The article does not mention automatism - though it describes the mechanics of cellular communication - and it does not mention built-in "information to act".-I don't see how you can draw such conclusions about the inflammatory cells. Of course they are acting on built-in instructions. I once had to give a second year lecture on the inflammatory reaction to my Med school class. If I had to present your concept of what I presented in the above article I would have been laughed out of the class.-Once again: a person develops a small cut which bleeds and has some foreign material in it. Wounded skin sends out chemical signals for help. Blood vessels dilate and deliver extra edema fluid. Various white cells arrive and congregate at the scene. White cells equals pus. There are several types of white cells which are called for by need for the different types of infectious process. Platelets are called to stop the bleeding and initiate the clotting process which is a cascade of around 20 chemical reactions with feed back controls for the correct amounts of each step. And fibroblasts arrive to start the scarring process. All of this is automatic, controlled, stepwise, and none of the cells are thinking. Chemicals and hormones are acting spontaneously from the trauma. The cells and platelets I am describing above are all independently floating around in the blood stream and react to the chemical signals. I view this as equivalent to bacteria, and you must realize by now, I will not change my concept of how all this works. We come from bacteria by evolution, and cell processes were set way back then, and simply modified for multicellularity by specialization. That is evolutionary continuity.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Saturday, September 05, 2015, 10:49 (3150 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Back you go to your meaningless “semi-autonomous”. Either he preprogrammed the innovations or he didn't. 
DAVID: Semi-autonomous is 'largely self-governing' in my Webster's Collegiate dictionary, which fits my theistic evolution concepts. Organisms have much innovative freedom as long as they fit God's desires.-This is a long, long, long way from your hypothesis of divine preprogramming and dabbling. What do you mean by “innovative freedom”? Are you now saying that innovations are NOT preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities, and allowed to survive if God approves? If not, please explain. (See also below.)-http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/43917/title/Neutrophils-Lead--T-C...

QUOTE: "For Kim, the phenomenon he and his colleagues have uncovered highlights the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell. This is individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function,” he said." (David's bold)-David's comment: These are thinking cells just like Shapiro describes. All the information to act is built in.-dhw: You begin by calling it “automatic action”, and you end by saying the "information to act" is built in. The article does not mention automatism - though it describes the mechanics of cellular communication - and it does not mention built-in "information to act"....Yes, indeed, these are also the thinking cells Shapiro describes as cognitive, sentient, decision-making beings.-DAVID: I don't see how you can draw such conclusions about the inflammatory cells. Of course they are acting on built-in instructions. I once had to give a second year lecture on the inflammatory reaction to my Med school class. If I had to present your concept of what I presented in the above article I would have been laughed out of the class.-In those days, you probably would. That is what Shapiro complains about. When asked why the concept of bacterial cognition is controversial, he replied: “Large organs chauvinism, so we like to think that only we can do things in a cognitive way.” If what Kim and his colleagues uncovered is the conventional concept of automatic behaviour, why are they making a fuss about their discovery? Please explain what you think they mean by this phenomenon highlighting “the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell.” Individuals sharing experiences and information, and working as a team, is a phenomenon integral to the functioning of all communities. You grant that these are signs of intelligence in humans and our fellow animals. What, then, do you think Kim and his colleagues are trying to draw our attention to by equating cell behaviour with that of the animal kingdom?-DAVID: I will not change my concept of how all this works. -Fair enough. You defend your beliefs and attack my hypothesis, and I defend my hypothesis and question your beliefs. That way, we may get some clarification.-DAVID: We come from bacteria by evolution, and cell processes were set way back then, and simply modified for multicellularity by specialization. That is evolutionary continuity.-I don't know what you mean by “simply modified for multicellularity by specialization”. In my hypothesis, evolution began with multicellularity, and each innovation was the result of cellular communities exploiting new conditions by pooling experience and information and working as a team, as per Kim and colleagues. (This fits in with the concept of the intelligent cell.) “Evolutionary continuity” is common descent, i.e. all organisms are descended from earlier organisms (regardless of innovative jumps), and specialization is the result of individual cells taking on a particular role within each cell community. Your concept of how it all works has been through divine preprogramming and/or divine dabbling, but you have taken to fudging it with terms like “guided”, “directed” and “semi-autonomous”, and “guidelines” (which turned out to be nothing more than the restrictions imposed by the nature of the organism and the environment). Now we have “innovative freedom so long as they fit God's desires”. I wonder how your Med School class would have responded to that. Be bold, be brave, be decisive, in the true tradition of all Texas cowboys, and shoot from the hip. Either God preprogrammed/dabbled evolutionary innovations (plus complex nests and lifestyles) or he didn't. Which is it?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Saturday, September 05, 2015, 19:04 (3150 days ago) @ dhw

dhw:What do you mean by “innovative freedom”? Are you now saying that innovations are NOT preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities, and allowed to survive if God approves? -Your statement is one of the probabilities, which in my view we have been discussing, under the subject of 'inventive mechanism'. I have said: 'semi-autonomous'. -
> 
> http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/43917/title/Neutrophils-Lead--T-C... 
> QUOTE: "For Kim, the phenomenon he and his colleagues have uncovered highlights the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell. This is individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function,” he said." (David's bold)-> 
> DAVID: I don't see how you can draw such conclusions about the inflammatory cells. Of course they are acting on built-in instructions..... If I had to present your concept of what I presented in the above article I would have been laughed out of the class.
> 
> dhw: If what Kim and his colleagues uncovered is the conventional concept of automatic behaviour, why are they making a fuss about their discovery? Please explain what you think they mean by this phenomenon highlighting “the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell.”..... What, then, do you think Kim and his colleagues are trying to draw our attention to by equating cell behaviour with that of the animal kingdom?-They have identified the chemical signals that run this process. In my lecture I described what happened, but didn't know the mechanism of control. that is what the article is presenting.
> 
> DAVID: We come from bacteria by evolution, and cell processes were set way back then, and simply modified for multicellularity by specialization. That is evolutionary continuity.
> 
> dhw: I don't know what you mean by “simply modified for multicellularity by specialization”.-As evolution progressed you know that cells were modified for specific actions by the various organ systems that developed. (Humans have 11.) The Cambrian folks were similar which is so surprising about the rapid development from the Ediacaran which perhaps had two-three cell types, not organ systems. -> dhw: Either God preprogrammed/dabbled evolutionary innovations (plus complex nests and lifestyles) or he didn't. Which is it?-I've told you I don't know, but God guided it.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Sunday, September 06, 2015, 15:31 (3149 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Organisms have much innovative freedom as long as they fit God's desires.

dhw: What do you mean by “innovative freedom”? Are you now saying that innovations are NOT preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities, and allowed to survive if God approves? -DAVID: Your statement is one of the probabilities, which in my view we have been discussing, under the subject of 'inventive mechanism'. I have said: 'semi-autonomous'.-This is excellent news. Throughout this discussion I have asked only that you consider it possible that innovations are not preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities. If you now consider it to be one of the “probabilities”, I can hardly ask for more. Thank you.-dhw: If what Kim and his colleagues uncovered is the conventional concept of automatic behaviour, why are they making a fuss about their discovery? Please explain what you think they mean by this phenomenon highlighting “the extent of collective behavior and shared information from animal species to the level of the cell.”..... What, then, do you think Kim and his colleagues are trying to draw our attention to by equating cell behaviour with that of the animal kingdom?-DAVID: They have identified the chemical signals that run this process. In my lecture I described what happened, but didn't know the mechanism of control. that is what the article is presenting.-These researchers' equation of cellular behaviour with animal behaviour confirms the findings of Shapiro and Co that cells, just like ourselves and our fellow animals, process and share information, communicate it to one another, and cooperate in order to take decisions and solve problems. The chemical signals are the equivalent of the chemical processes without which we ourselves cannot perform all the activities that precede and accompany the transformation of thought into action. In other words, the chemical signals do not explain how we or they arrive at our decisions. Could it be that since you gave your lecture, science has discovered more than just the chemical signals?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Sunday, September 06, 2015, 18:24 (3149 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Your statement is one of the probabilities, which in my view we have been discussing, under the subject of 'inventive mechanism'. I have said: 'semi-autonomous'.
> 
> dhw: Throughout this discussion I have asked only that you consider it possible that innovations are not preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities. If you now consider it to be one of the “probabilities”, I can hardly ask for more. Thank you.-I don't know where you've been, but this has always been my position. Invention under limits or guidelines.
> 
> dhw: These researchers' equation of cellular behaviour with animal behaviour confirms the findings of Shapiro and Co that cells, just like ourselves and our fellow animals, process and share information, communicate it to one another, and cooperate in order to take decisions and solve problems. The chemical signals are the equivalent of the chemical processes without which we ourselves cannot perform all the activities that precede and accompany the transformation of thought into action. In other words, the chemical signals do not explain how we or they arrive at our decisions. Could it be that since you gave your lecture, science has discovered more than just the chemical signals?-No. Once again many cellular responses are almost instantaneous and automatic based on receipt of chemical signals. You are over-interpreting in order to support your hypothesis of what is literally pan-psychism.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Monday, September 07, 2015, 19:51 (3147 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Throughout this discussion I have asked only that you consider it possible that innovations are not preprogrammed/dabbled but are created by the independent intelligence of cell communities. If you now consider it to be one of the “probabilities”, I can hardly ask for more. Thank you.
DAVID: I don't know where you've been, but this has always been my position. Invention under limits or guidelines.-I know where I've been. I've been bogged down in your hypothesis of God programming the first cells with all the innovations and complex nests and lifestyles for the last 3.8 billion years, or alternatively intervening, because not even the poor old weaverbird was capable of designing its own nest. So this is great. Now we can agree that it is not just possible but even probable that organisms have their own inventive intelligence, subject only to the restrictions imposed by their own nature and that of the environment. (And God may have invented the inventive intelligence.) 
 
dhw: These researchers' equation of cellular behaviour with animal behaviour confirms the findings of Shapiro and Co that cells, just like ourselves and our fellow animals, process and share information, communicate it to one another, and cooperate in order to take decisions and solve problems. The chemical signals are the equivalent of the chemical processes without which we ourselves cannot perform all the activities that precede and accompany the transformation of thought into action. In other words, the chemical signals do not explain how we or they arrive at our decisions. Could it be that since you gave your lecture, science has discovered more than just the chemical signals?-DAVID: No. Once again many cellular responses are almost instantaneous and automatic based on receipt of chemical signals. You are over-interpreting in order to support your hypothesis of what is literally pan-psychism.-It is not those “many cellular responses” that are in dispute. It's the rest of the process. What these researchers have drawn attention to is “individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function” - a process common “from animal species to the level of the cell”. That is not an over-interpretation. They are the words used by the researchers. Animals, including humans, share experiences and information in order to make decisions and solve problems. So do cells, according to these researchers. If that denotes intelligence in us, it denotes intelligence in cells. But this observation does not go quite as far as the panpsychist hypothesis, which extends beyond organic life. The hypothesis we are dealing with here relates only to the intelligence of living organisms and its possible (or even probable) influence on the course of evolution, which you have now agreed to, as above.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Monday, September 07, 2015, 23:01 (3147 days ago) @ dhw

Invention under limits or guidelines.[/i]
> 
> dhw: Now we can agree that it is not just possible but even probable that organisms have their own inventive intelligence, subject only to the restrictions imposed by their own nature and that of the environment. (And God may have invented the inventive intelligence.)-No. You need to add that God has his own guidelines along with those of nature and environment. View His guidelines as limitations to the directionality and scope of independent innovations. Please remember, I view God as guiding evolution toward humans.- 
 
> 
> dhw: It is not those “many cellular responses” that are in dispute. It's the rest of the process. What these researchers have drawn attention to is “individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function” - a process common “from animal species to the level of the cell”. That is not an over-interpretation. They are the words used by the researchers. Animals, including humans, share experiences and information in order to make decisions and solve problems. So do cells, according to these researchers. -My view is the sharing of information is through chemical signals to which the cells respond automatically using the intelligent information and instructions they have to use.-> dhw:If that denotes intelligence in us, it denotes intelligence in cells...... The hypothesis we are dealing with here relates only to the intelligence of living organisms and its possible (or even probable) influence on the course of evolution, which you have now agreed to, as above.-Once again, the intelligent actions of cells are not equivalent to human intelligence and decision making.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Tuesday, September 08, 2015, 17:47 (3147 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Now we can agree that it is not just possible but even probable that organisms have their own inventive intelligence, subject only to the restrictions imposed by their own nature and that of the environment. (And God may have invented the inventive intelligence.)-DAVID: No. You need to add that God has his own guidelines along with those of nature and environment. View His guidelines as limitations to the directionality and scope of independent innovations. Please remember, I view God as guiding evolution toward humans.-Now that organisms produce their own independent innovations (as opposed to being preprogrammed), I wonder how God can limit their scope and direction other than through the nature of the organism itself and the environment. I can only think of him intervening if he doesn't like them or if he needs an innovation to take a particular organism in the direction of humans, but perhaps you have other means of guidance in mind? Otherwise, there would have to be an awful lot of dabbling.-dhw: It is not those “many cellular responses” that are in dispute. It's the rest of the process. What these researchers have drawn attention to is “individual cells sharing their experience and information to perform a team function” - a process common “from animal species to the level of the cell”. That is not an over-interpretation. They are the words used by the researchers. Animals, including humans, share experiences and information in order to make decisions and solve problems. So do cells, according to these researchers. -DAVID: My view is the sharing of information is through chemical signals to which the cells respond automatically using the intelligent information and instructions they have to use.-Does this mean that God issued every different type of cell with detailed instructions on how to deal with every different type of problem? Unless he intervenes when each problem occurs, this means he must have preprogrammed the first cells with all the information and instructions to be passed down through billions of years....In the name of Ockham, wouldn't it be simpler if cells used their own (God-given?) intelligence to process and exchange new information as and when it came in, and to cooperate in taking their own decisions accordingly?
 
dhw: If that denotes intelligence in us, it denotes intelligence in cells...... The hypothesis we are dealing with here relates only to the intelligence of living organisms and its possible (or even probable) influence on the course of evolution, which you have now agreed to, as above.-DAVID: Once again, the intelligent actions of cells are not equivalent to human intelligence and decision making.-No one is claiming that cells have the range or even the form of intelligence that we have. The claim is that within their own limitations, they work together intelligently and not automatically to reach their decisions.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 08, 2015, 18:02 (3147 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Now that organisms produce their own independent innovations (as opposed to being preprogrammed), I wonder how God can limit their scope and direction other than through the nature of the organism itself and the environment. I can only think of him intervening if he doesn't like them or if he needs an innovation to take a particular organism in the direction of humans, but perhaps you have other means of guidance in mind? -I think defined patterns and limits would work. The Pentadactyl pattern of feet as an example on board in the limitations instructions.
> 
> DAVID: My view is the sharing of information is through chemical signals to which the cells respond automatically using the intelligent information and instructions they have to use.-As in this article about quorum sensing by molecular signals:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/molecular-tweeting-could-hold-the-key-to-busting-superbugs/?WT.mc_id=SA_EVO_20150908-" Bacteria communicate by exchanging signaling molecules, a process known as quorum sensing. The idea is to find out what's behind the behavior of these pathogens and how it can be fought using antibiotics, quorum-sensing inhibitors or even probiotics, he adds."
> 
> dhw: In the name of Ockham, wouldn't it be simpler if cells used their own (God-given?) intelligence to process and exchange new information as and when it came in, and to cooperate in taking their own decisions accordingly?-Within limits and patterns as described above.
 
> dhw: No one is claiming that cells have the range or even the form of intelligence that we have. The claim is that within their own limitations, they work together intelligently and not automatically to reach their decisions.-One cannot tell the difference between using intelligence and following intelligent information they have been given. Example: I wanted to be a physician, but could not intelligently act in that role until I had the training (given to me) to then perform intelligent acts as a physician.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Wednesday, September 09, 2015, 13:17 (3146 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Now that organisms produce their own independent innovations (as opposed to being preprogrammed), I wonder how God can limit their scope and direction other than through the nature of the organism itself and the environment. I can only think of him intervening if he doesn't like them or if he needs an innovation to take a particular organism in the direction of humans, but perhaps you have other means of guidance in mind? 
DAVID: I think defined patterns and limits would work. The Pentadactyl pattern of feet as an example on board in the limitations instructions.-I see such patterns as examples of convergence, once certain intelligent cell communities had found the most efficient form of limb for their particular way of life. Of course there are vast numbers of cell communities that have devised different forms. That is the beauty of the independent inventive mechanism: it explains all the different varieties. -DAVID: My view is the sharing of information is through chemical signals to which the cells respond automatically using the intelligent information and instructions they have to use.
As in this article about quorum sensing by molecular signals:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/molecular-tweeting-could-hold-the-key-to-bust...-"Bacteria communicate by exchanging signaling molecules, a process known as quorum sensing. The idea is to find out what's behind the behavior of these pathogens and how it can be fought using antibiotics, quorum-sensing inhibitors or even probiotics, he adds."-Yes, they use their own physical means of communication, just as we do. But the researchers are trying to find out what is behind their behaviour. You only focus on the physical manifestations, whereas they are trying to find the “thinking” that leads to those manifestations. You insist that the thinking doesn't exist, and they are only obeying instructions passed onto them since life began. See below:-dhw: In the name of Ockham, wouldn't it be simpler if cells used their own (God-given?) intelligence to process and exchange new information as and when it came in, and to cooperate in taking their own decisions accordingly?
DAVID: Within limits and patterns as described above.-The limits are clear (individual and environmental). Bacteria will behave as bacteria, if that is what you mean by patterns. Perhaps their bacterial behaviour is caused by the fact that they “think” as bacteria.-dhw: No one is claiming that cells have the range or even the form of intelligence that we have. The claim is that within their own limitations, they work together intelligently and not automatically to reach their decisions.-DAVID: One cannot tell the difference between using intelligence and following intelligent information they have been given. Example: I wanted to be a physician, but could not intelligently act in that role until I had the training (given to me) to then perform intelligent acts as a physician.-An excellent analogy. Thanks to your intelligence, you were able to absorb and process all the information necessary for your role and then use it appropriately. You are not an automaton. Thanks to their intelligence, bacteria are able to absorb and process all the information necessary for their role and then use it appropriately. They are not automatons.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 09, 2015, 14:29 (3146 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: One cannot tell the difference between using intelligence and following intelligent information they have been given. Example: I wanted to be a physician, but could not intelligently act in that role until I had the training (given to me) to then perform intelligent acts as a physician.
> 
> dhw: An excellent analogy. Thanks to your intelligence, you were able to absorb and process all the information necessary for your role and then use it appropriately. You are not an automaton. Thanks to their intelligence, bacteria are able to absorb and process all the information necessary for their role and then use it appropriately. They are not automatons.-But you haven't challenged the point of my analogy: one cannot tell the difference. On the outside looking in there are always the two possibilities, and you always pick one only, while seeing both. I do the same, but based on other biological situations I've mentioned over and over.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Thursday, September 10, 2015, 11:51 (3145 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: One cannot tell the difference between using intelligence and following intelligent information they have been given. Example: I wanted to be a physician, but could not intelligently act in that role until I had the training (given to me) to then perform intelligent acts as a physician.-dhw: An excellent analogy. Thanks to your intelligence, you were able to absorb and process all the information necessary for your role and then use it appropriately. You are not an automaton. Thanks to their intelligence, bacteria are able to absorb and process all the information necessary for their role and then use it appropriately. They are not automatons.-DAVID: But you haven't challenged the point of my analogy: one cannot tell the difference. On the outside looking in there are always the two possibilities, and you always pick one only, while seeing both. I do the same, but based on other biological situations I've mentioned over and over.-Oh my God, then you're a robot!-But you are quite right: on the outside looking in there are always the two possibilities, and you always pick one only, while seeing both. I do the same, but based on the biological situations mentioned over and over again by Shapiro, McClintock, Margulis, Pfeffer, Albrecht-Buehler....-DAVID (under "Nature's Wonders”): Mealy bugs survive because they have onboard two bacteria, one inside the other, to produce the necessary amino acids to survive and to share genes:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/06/130620142954.htm-QUOTE: "Mealybugs only eat plant sap, but sap doesn't contain all the essential amino acids the insects need to survive. Luckily, the bugs have a symbiotic relationship with two species of bacteria -- one living inside the other in a situation unique to known biology -- to manufacture the nutrients sap doesn't provide.
"The net result: The bacteria get a comfy mealybug home, and the bugs get the nutrition they need to live.”-Once more, huge thanks for sharing these wonders with us. -If these organisms have not worked out their own symbiotic relationship, who or what did? Are you telling me that God preprogrammed the first living cells to ensure that the mealybugs and bacteria would eventually get together? Or he dabbled to make them do it? You are faced with the same dilemma as with the weaverbird and its nest, the wasp that lays its eggs on a spider's back, the monarch butterfly that reproduces four times before emigrating, etc. You have finally conceded that these organisms may have an independent inventive intelligence of their own, but bacteria, which perform similar miracles of intricate design, have to have direct instructions from your God, because you cannot conceive of any intelligence without a brain. I still wonder why God has bothered to preprogramme such minutiae when apparently all he really wanted from evolution was us humans. But perhaps we humans can't exist without the mealybug/bacteria symbiosis.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 10, 2015, 14:17 (3145 days ago) @ dhw

"The net result: The bacteria get a comfy mealybug home, and the bugs get the nutrition they need to live.”[/i]
> 
> dhw: Once more, huge thanks for sharing these wonders with us. 
> 
> If these organisms have not worked out their own symbiotic relationship, who or what did? Are you telling me that God preprogrammed the first living cells to ensure that the mealybugs and bacteria would eventually get together? Or he dabbled to make them do it?... You have finally conceded that these organisms may have an independent inventive intelligence of their own, but bacteria, which perform similar miracles of intricate design, have to have direct instructions from your God, because you cannot conceive of any intelligence without a brain. -My position is that God created life. I don't think it arose by chance. The life we see through Natures Wonders shows highly complex arrangements. This means that 'life' as an emergent entity is highly inventive. Somehow through God's guidance. I can go no further, but you want it analyzed to the finest detail, which I cannot do, because God doesn't tell me how He does it.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Friday, September 11, 2015, 16:22 (3144 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: The net result: The bacteria get a comfy mealybug home, and the bugs get the nutrition they need to live.”-dhw: Once more, huge thanks for sharing these wonders with us. 
If these organisms have not worked out their own symbiotic relationship, who or what did? Are you telling me that God preprogrammed the first living cells to ensure that the mealybugs and bacteria would eventually get together? Or he dabbled to make them do it?... You have finally conceded that these organisms may have an independent inventive intelligence of their own, but bacteria, which perform similar miracles of intricate design, have to have direct instructions from your God, because you cannot conceive of any intelligence without a brain. -DAVID: My position is that God created life. I don't think it arose by chance. The life we see through Natures Wonders shows highly complex arrangements. This means that 'life' as an emergent entity is highly inventive. Somehow through God's guidance. I can go no further, but you want it analyzed to the finest detail, which I cannot do, because God doesn't tell me how He does it.-But you have repeatedly told us how he does it and how he doesn't do it, and it is your “finest details” that I keep challenging. (For the sake of our discussions, I have accepted theistic evolution.) You have insisted that bacteria have no intelligence and therefore must have been given instructions by God, and until recently the same applied to weaverbirds, monarchs etc., though you have now granted them a degree of independent intelligence. You have said that the ways in which they were given these instructions were by preprogramming or dabbling. You also insist that God's plan from the very beginning was to produce humans, which means that evolution had to be geared to us. When did he tell you all this? Everyone who contributes to this website is looking for explanations, and we continually examine those on offer to see if they stand up to scrutiny. You have quite rightly probed what for me is a new evolutionary hypothesis arising from the work of Margulis & Co - namely, the intelligent, cooperative cell - and I have probed your own hypotheses, which I find to be increasingly far-fetched as well as ill-fitting in the context of the higgledy-piggledy comings and goings and the vast variety of evolutionary history. The case of the mealybug bacteria is just one of countless examples. If you don't think God would have preprogrammed these bacteria or dabbled with them, might that not suggest that like the weaverbird and the monarch and the wasp, they may be equipped with an independent intelligence of their own?

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Monday, September 14, 2015, 01:19 (3141 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: My position is that God created life. I don't think it arose by chance. The life we see through Natures Wonders shows highly complex arrangements. This means that 'life' as an emergent entity is highly inventive. Somehow through God's guidance. I can go no further, but you want it analyzed to the finest detail, which I cannot do, because God doesn't tell me how He does it.-
> dhw: If you don't think God would have preprogrammed these bacteria or dabbled with them, might that not suggest that like the weaverbird and the monarch and the wasp, they may be equipped with an independent intelligence of their own?-I don't know why you can't simply read my statement above and quit picking at it. I've said that life's processes are inventive. It may well be because each organism is given intelligent information to use for planning. That is obvious. I do think God helped pre-programmed or dabbled or both. I've said He guided evolution. And yes it is my contention that He planned on humans arriving. I've never changed my tune and won't.

Clever Corvids: using tools

by dhw, Monday, September 14, 2015, 19:38 (3140 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: My position is that God created life. I don't think it arose by chance. The life we see through Natures Wonders shows highly complex arrangements. This means that 'life' as an emergent entity is highly inventive. Somehow through God's guidance. I can go no further, but you want it analyzed to the finest detail, which I cannot do, because God doesn't tell me how He does it.-Dhw: But you have repeatedly told us how he does it and how he doesn't do it, and it is your “finest details” that I keep challenging. [...] You have insisted that bacteria have no intelligence and therefore must have been given instructions by God [...] You have said that the ways in which they were given these instructions were by preprogramming or dabbling. You also insist that God's plan from the very beginning was to produce humans, which means that evolution had to be geared to us. [...] You have quite rightly probed what for me is a new evolutionary hypothesis arising from the work of Margulis & Co - namely, the intelligent, cooperative cell - and I have probed your own hypotheses [...] The case of the mealybug bacteria is just one of countless examples. If you don't think God would have preprogrammed these bacteria or dabbled with them, might that not suggest that like the weaverbird and the monarch and the wasp, they may be equipped with an independent intelligence of their own?-DAVID: I don't know why you can't simply read my statement above and quit picking at it. I've said that life's processes are inventive. It may well be because each organism is given intelligent information to use for planning. That is obvious. I do think God helped pre-programmed or dabbled or both. I've said He guided evolution. And yes it is my contention that He planned on humans arriving. I've never changed my tune and won't.-“Oh do not pick,” the Lord God said.
“This fruit I will not share.”
But Adam picked, and very soon
The tree looked strangely bare.-I'll risk trying to explain once more why I pick. The essence of my hypothesis is that it is individual living things (not life as an 'emergent entity') that have intelligent, inventive minds (of whatever sort). Information is not intelligent; minds are intelligent, and minds use information for planning. My final question once more concerned bacteria, as they may hold the key to the beginnings of evolution, but if you believe God preprogrammed, dabbles with or personally guides them in their countless ways of solving problems, so be it. God's planning on humans arriving seems to me to be feasible if I take the theist line; for me the problem lies in the idea that this was his purpose from the very start, and he geared the vast higgledy-piggledy history of evolution to this one outcome. But perhaps we have reached a dead end, and I don't want you to be irritated by my picking. There are plenty of other tunes for us to hum (and haw)! -
+

Clever Corvids: using tools

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 15, 2015, 00:48 (3140 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: But perhaps we have reached a dead end, and I don't want you to be irritated by my picking. There are plenty of other tunes for us to hum (and haw)!-I really think we have reached the end. The experts you keep quoting at me are ones I presented to you. I understand their experimental findings and interpret them differently. We've agreed the odds are 50/50 either they are right or I am right. I base my conclusions on other facts and information about how single cells work and apply that to single-celled animals. 'Nuff said. We will have other discussions I know. I'm now back from a short trip and will resume contributions.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Tuesday, March 15, 2016, 20:11 (2957 days ago) @ David Turell

The finding that New Caledonian have a unique beak raises the old chicken/egg problem, beak first or tools first or saltation, both together:-http://phys.org/news/2016-03-unique-beak-evolved-tool-caledonian.html-"We used shape analysis and CT [computer tomography] scanning to compare the shape and structure of the New Caledonian crow's bill with some of its crow relatives and a woodpecker species with a similar foraging niche," said lead author Hunt.-"'This study shows that the unique bill contributes to the birds' ability to use and probably make tools," he said. "We argue that the beak became specialized for tool manipulation once the birds began using tools, and that this enhanced tool manipulation ability may have allowed the crows to make more complex tools."-"Such tools may range from sticks to barbed leaves or hooked twigs used to fish the crow's favorite food from the trunk of a tree - the juicy grubs of the longhorn beetle. The birds annoy their prey by poking around the grub's large, sensitive mandibles. When the grub grabs the stick or other tool, the bird hauls it out.-"'Their bill is shorter than a regular crow's," McGowan said. "It's blunter, and it doesn't curve down like nearly all bird bills do. The lower mandible actually curves slightly up, which likely gives it the strength it needs to hold the tool. And because the bill doesn't curve downward it brings the tool into the narrow range of the bird's binocular vision so it can better see what it is doing."-"Birds with blunter, straighter bills were probably more adept at handling tools for foraging and over time those features evolved, McGowan said. Tool use has now become ingrained in the crow's biology. In the case of the New Caledonian crow's beak, you might say it's not so much "you are what you eat," but "you are how you eat."-"'They hold the stick tool so that it goes up along the side of their head along the length of the bill," McGowan explains. "Apparently there are birds that favor one side of the head over the other—left-sticked or right-sticked, you could call it—it's really cool."-"The question that cannot be answered is why the crows started using tools in the first place. It may have been a matter of chance because most birds do just fine foraging with their beaks and feet without resorting to tool-making, McGowan said."-Comment: McGowan's point is the NC crows have a non-required phenotypic change. Why did it happen, or was it given?

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Thursday, March 17, 2016, 13:14 (2956 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: The finding that New Caledonian have a unique beak raises the old chicken/egg problem, beak first or tools first or saltation, both together:
http://phys.org/news/2016-03-unique-beak-evolved-tool-caledonian.html-QUOTE: "The question that cannot be answered is why the crows started using tools in the first place. It may have been a matter of chance because most birds do just fine foraging with their beaks and feet without resorting to tool-making, McGowan said."-David's comment: McGowan's point is the NC crows have a non-required phenotypic change. Why did it happen, or was it given?-It just doesn't seem to occur even to those people who study these birds, and know how intelligent they are, that these crows might have started using tools because some particularly clever one(s) devised a new method of getting to a nosh. And when it worked, as with all successful inventions, it caught on. Not “required”, not “given”, but simply an intelligent innovation for the purpose of improvement. And once it caught on, suitable adjustments took place to make the method even more efficient. Or are you now going to tell us that your God had to instruct these particular crows to use tools because otherwise nature would have been unbalanced and humans could never have appeared or been fed?

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 17, 2016, 14:17 (2956 days ago) @ dhw


> QUOTE: "The question that cannot be answered is why the crows started using tools in the first place. It may have been a matter of chance because most birds do just fine foraging with their beaks and feet without resorting to tool-making, McGowan said."
> 
> David's comment: McGowan's point is the NC crows have a non-required phenotypic change. Why did it happen, or was it given?
> 
> dhw: It just doesn't seem to occur even to those people who study these birds, and know how intelligent they are, that these crows might have started using tools because some particularly clever one(s) devised a new method of getting to a nosh. And when it worked, as with all successful inventions, it caught on..-You are now anthropomorphizing crows! One lucky crow guy discovers a trick for tool use. Does he tell the others about it or do they fly around watching him and learn the trick as us flightless humans do? The research fellow knows the crows are smart which is why he studies them. His point was the other birds get by without this style of beak, so why did it appear? My answer, the innate drive to complexity we see in evolution, something Denton comments about in his book, I've just found.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Friday, March 18, 2016, 16:17 (2955 days ago) @ David Turell

QUOTE: "The question that cannot be answered is why the crows started using tools in the first place. It may have been a matter of chance because most birds do just fine foraging with their beaks and feet without resorting to tool-making, McGowan said."
 
David's comment: McGowan's point is the NC crows have a non-required phenotypic change. Why did it happen, or was it given?
 
dhw: It just doesn't seem to occur even to those people who study these birds, and know how intelligent they are, that these crows might have started using tools because some particularly clever one(s) devised a new method of getting to a nosh. And when it worked, as with all successful inventions, it caught on.. -DAVID: You are now anthropomorphizing crows! One lucky crow guy discovers a trick for tool use. Does he tell the others about it or do they fly around watching him and learn the trick as us flightless humans do? The research fellow knows the crows are smart which is why he studies them. His point was the other birds get by without this style of beak, so why did it appear? My answer, the innate drive to complexity we see in evolution, something Denton comments about in his book, I've just found.-To say that crows are intelligent enough to use tools is not an anthropomorphization! How does any innovation catch on? Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools? Organisms can learn from other organisms, and in due course new behaviour may also lead to physical adaptations. Why did it appear? What you call the innate drive to complexity is what I call the drive for survival and improvement. The difference between us is simply that you attribute every improvement to divine preprogramming or intervention, whereas I suggest it is due to the intelligence of the organisms themselves, possibly invented by your God.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Friday, March 18, 2016, 17:20 (2955 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: To say that crows are intelligent enough to use tools is not an anthropomorphization! How does any innovation catch on? Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools? Organisms can learn from other organisms, and in due course new behaviour may also lead to physical adaptations. Why did it appear? What you call the innate drive to complexity is what I call the drive for survival and improvement. -You haven't answered my point. How does one crow show the others so they all learn the tricks? Is it monkey see monkey do, which works because they live in troops? The crows on my ranch fly around by themselves, unless fighting, which they do regularly. In your evolution-dependent view we probably got to be warlike from them, since you think humans inherited all their emotions from lesser organisms.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Saturday, March 19, 2016, 12:54 (2954 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: To say that crows are intelligent enough to use tools is not an anthropomorphization! How does any innovation catch on? Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools? Organisms can learn from other organisms, and in due course new behaviour may also lead to physical adaptations. Why did it appear? What you call the innate drive to complexity is what I call the drive for survival and improvement. -DAVID: You haven't answered my point. How does one crow show the others so they all learn the tricks? Is it monkey see monkey do, which works because they live in troops? The crows on my ranch fly around by themselves, unless fighting, which they do regularly. In your evolution-dependent view we probably got to be warlike from them, since you think humans inherited all their emotions from lesser organisms.-I wrote “organisms can learn from other organisms”. Of course other crows can see what the inventor did. Do you think they're blind until they start fighting? And the inventor can teach his/her offspring to do it too, and in due course more and more crows will catch on and specific adaptations will take place (as with Darwin's finches). It doesn't have to happen overnight. Now perhaps you'll answer the question I asked you: “Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools?” As for war, you yourself have frequently quoted Tennyson's “Nature, red in tooth and claw”, and you know as well as I do that conflict is every bit as common throughout the natural world as cooperation. And yes, I believe we inherited aggression, greed, territorialism from our fellow animals, just as we inherited parental love, social structures, and the need to explore.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Saturday, March 19, 2016, 14:08 (2954 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Of course other crows can see what the inventor did. Do you think they're blind until they start fighting? -It is this point that I doubt. The crows I see are solo flyers. No one crow watches another build a nest.-> dhw:And the inventor can teach his/her offspring to do it too,-Your point here is valid, only if they hang around to watch him, but they don't! They fledge and fly off to their own lives. Crows are no a group community. You are anthropomorphizing crows. -
> dhw: Now perhaps you'll answer the question I asked you: “Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools?”-YES-> dhw: And yes, I believe we inherited aggression, greed, territorialism from our fellow animals, just as we inherited parental love, social structures, and the need to explore.-I think they are parallel developments. Do we have specific genes for greed, aggression, etc.? No. Genes are the tools of evolution.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Sunday, March 20, 2016, 17:41 (2953 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Of course other crows can see what the inventor did. Do you think they're blind until they start fighting? 
DAVID: It is this point that I doubt. The crows I see are solo flyers. No one crow watches another build a nest. - I find it hard to believe that a crow using a stick to obtain its nosh will be unseen by other crows. In any case, there are crows all round where I live, and I see lots of them at a time. Perhaps yours are simply different from ours. I believe some species live in communities of thousands! As for the offspring, you say they would only learn if they “hung around to watch”, but they fly off when they fledge. I don't suppose either of us has a clue how long it takes for a young bird to learn how to grab a twig and forage. - dhw: Now perhaps you'll answer the question I asked you: “Do you think your God preprogrammed every Caledonian crow to suddenly start using tools?”
DAVID: YES - Thank you. Just one more natural wonder to add to the millions preprogrammed in and passed down by those first cells through thousands of millions of years and organisms. - DAVID: “In your evolution-dependent view we probably got to be warlike from them [crows], since you think humans inherited all their emotions from lesser organisms.”

dhw: And yes, I believe we inherited aggression, greed, territorialism from our fellow animals, just as we inherited parental love, social structures, and the need to explore.
DAVID: I think they are parallel developments. Do we have specific genes for greed, aggression, etc.? No. Genes are the tools of evolution. - Evolution is not confined to genes. You have already devoted several threads to the evolution of language, for which there is no known gene. Here we are talking about the evolution of behaviour. All the above behavioural attributes existed in animals that came long before us, and one can link all of them to the drive for survival and/or improvement. If you believe in common descent, you can hardly argue that they are “parallel” developments: they have remained constant right back to whatever ancestry you can think of.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Sunday, March 20, 2016, 18:26 (2952 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: I find it hard to believe that a crow using a stick to obtain its nosh will be unseen by other crows. In any case, there are crows all round where I live, and I see lots of them at a time. Perhaps yours are simply different from ours. I believe some species live in communities of thousands!-Hyperbole won't do! I've seen flocks of birds as they migrate. Our crows don't flock..-> dhw: As for the offspring, you say they would only learn if they “hung around to watch”, but they fly off when they fledge. I don't suppose either of us has a clue how long it takes for a young bird to learn how to grab a twig and forage.-That is why it is built in.-> [/i]
> dhw: And yes, I believe we inherited aggression, greed, territorialism from our fellow animals, just as we inherited parental love, social structures, and the need to explore.
> DAVID: I think they are parallel developments. Do we have specific genes for greed, aggression, etc.? No. Genes are the tools of evolution.
> 
> dhw: Evolution is not confined to genes. You have already devoted several threads to the evolution of language, for which there is no known gene. Here we are talking about the evolution of behaviour....If you believe in common descent, you can hardly argue that they are “parallel” developments: they have remained constant right back to whatever ancestry you can think of.-Since the simplest parts of our brain function are similar, I think the emotions we see, fear, interest, aggression, etc. can be common, but I'm not at all sure we evolved ours from the organisms that preceded us, but instead developed our own forms of them.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Monday, March 21, 2016, 10:44 (2952 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: I find it hard to believe that a crow using a stick to obtain its nosh will be unseen by other crows. In any case, there are crows all round where I live, and I see lots of them at a time. Perhaps yours are simply different from ours. I believe some species live in communities of thousands!-DAVID: Hyperbole won't do! I've seen flocks of birds as they migrate. Our crows don't flock.-A quick google has come up with the following:
“Crows have been congregating in large roosts in the fall and winter for as long as there have been crows. Crow roosts can range from small scattered roosts of under one hundred individuals to the spectacularly large roosts of hundreds of thousands, or even more than a million crows! A roost in Fort Cobb, Oklahoma was estimated to hold over two million crows (Gerald Iams, 1972, State of Oklahoma Upland Game Inventory W-82-R-10). Most roosts are much smaller, but roosts of tens of thousands are common.” -dhw: And yes, I believe we inherited aggression, greed, territorialism from our fellow animals, just as we inherited parental love, social structures, and the need to explore.
DAVID: I think they are parallel developments. Do we have specific genes for greed, aggression, etc.? No. Genes are the tools of evolution.
dhw: Evolution is not confined to genes. You have already devoted several threads to the evolution of language, for which there is no known gene. Here we are talking about the evolution of behaviour....If you believe in common descent, you can hardly argue that they are “parallel” developments: they have remained constant right back to whatever ancestry you can think of.
DAVID: Since the simplest parts of our brain function are similar, I think the emotions we see, fear, interest, aggression, etc. can be common, but I'm not at all sure we evolved ours from the organisms that preceded us, but instead developed our own forms of them.-Every species develops its own forms of behaviour, or its own ways of surviving and/or improving. I would suggest that is how evolution works. In the case of homo sapiens, the developments are so sophisticated that some folk don't even recognize that sending tanks into a neighbouring country is a development from Max the monkey snatching a banana from sister Minnie.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Monday, March 21, 2016, 14:43 (2952 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: A quick google has come up with the following:
> “Crows have been congregating in large roosts in the fall and winter for as long as there have been crows. Crow roosts can range from small scattered roosts of under one hundred individuals to the spectacularly large roosts of hundreds of thousands, or even more than a million crows! A roost in Fort Cobb, Oklahoma was estimated to hold over two million crows (Gerald Iams, 1972, State of Oklahoma Upland Game Inventory W-82-R-10). Most roosts are much smaller, but roosts of tens of thousands are common.” -No nests are built after the Spring! Perhaps there are teaching sessions over the winter.-> DAVID: Since the simplest parts of our brain function are similar, I think the emotions we see, fear, interest, aggression, etc. can be common, but I'm not at all sure we evolved ours from the organisms that preceded us, but instead developed our own forms of them.
> 
> dhw: Every species develops its own forms of behaviour, or its own ways of surviving and/or improving. I would suggest that is how evolution works. In the case of homo sapiens, the developments are so sophisticated that some folk don't even recognize that sending tanks into a neighbouring country is a development from Max the monkey snatching a banana from sister Minnie.-Sometimes we agree a bit. These are parallel developments. Self-protection for survival is built into life.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Tuesday, March 22, 2016, 09:58 (2951 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: I believe some species live in communities of thousands!
DAVID: Hyperbole won't do! 
dhw: A quick google has come up with the following:
“Crows have been congregating in large roosts in the fall and winter for as long as there have been crows. Crow roosts can range from small scattered roosts of under one hundred individuals to the spectacularly large roosts of hundreds of thousands, or even more than a million crows! A roost in Fort Cobb, Oklahoma was estimated to hold over two million crows (Gerald Iams, 1972, State of Oklahoma Upland Game Inventory W-82-R-10). Most roosts are much smaller, but roosts of tens of thousands are common.” -DAVID: No nests are built after the Spring! Perhaps there are teaching sessions over the winter.-No hyperbole, then. It doesn't matter when lessons begin, or how many lessons are needed, or when crows observe other crows using tools. Once the first clever crow has come up with his/her “invention”, there are perfectly simple ways in which other crows can take it up. God did not need to preprogramme every Caledonian crow to start using tools.-DAVID: Since the simplest parts of our brain function are similar, I think the emotions we see, fear, interest, aggression, etc. can be common, but I'm not at all sure we evolved ours from the organisms that preceded us, but instead developed our own forms of them.
dhw: Every species develops its own forms of behaviour, or its own ways of surviving and/or improving. I would suggest that is how evolution works. In the case of homo sapiens, the developments are so sophisticated that some folk don't even recognize that sending tanks into a neighbouring country is a development from Max the monkey snatching a banana from sister Minnie.-DAVID: Sometimes we agree a bit. These are parallel developments. Self-protection for survival is built into life.-Issue settled, so long as you agree that aggression, fear, the need to explore, social cooperation, parental love etc. etc. are common to the organisms that have preceded us, and are not human inventions.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Tuesday, March 22, 2016, 15:03 (2951 days ago) @ dhw

dhw;It doesn't matter when lessons begin, or how many lessons are needed, or when crows observe other crows using tools. Once the first clever crow has come up with his/her “invention”, there are perfectly simple ways in which other crows can take it up. God did not need to preprogramme every Caledonian crow to start using tools. - Only when observation shows crows watching other crows inventing is your point valid. - 
> DAVID: Sometimes we agree a bit. These are parallel developments. Self-protection for survival is built into life.
> 
> dhw: Issue settled, so long as you agree that aggression, fear, the need to explore, social cooperation, parental love etc. etc. are common to the organisms that have preceded us, and are not human inventions. - Agreed. All organisms with brains have parallel capacities to react as your describe.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by dhw, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 13:59 (2950 days ago) @ David Turell

Dhw: It doesn't matter when lessons begin, or how many lessons are needed, or when crows observe other crows using tools. Once the first clever crow has come up with his/her “invention”, there are perfectly simple ways in which other crows can take it up. God did not need to preprogramme every Caledonian crow to start using 
tools.
DAVID: Only when observation shows crows watching other crows inventing is your point valid.-We're not talking here about the internal combustion engine or rockets to Mars! Here are the inventions:
QUOTE: “Such tools may range from sticks to barbed leaves or hooked twigs used to fish the crow's favorite food from the trunk of a tree - the juicy grubs of the longhorn beetle. The birds annoy their prey by poking around the grub's large, sensitive mandibles. When the grub grabs the stick or other tool, the bird hauls it out.”-Once upon a time, Christine Crow had an idea. She used a stick to get herself some lovely grub. Chris Crow was flying past when he saw her do it. “Caw!” said Chris, “that's a mighty fine idea. An' I reckon I c'd do the same with this here barbed leaf.” And as the years went by, Cressida and Crispin added their own variations, and beaks became adapted to the new method of grub-grabbing. And along came a middle-aged man with a long beard, and he took one look and said, “Holy Texas, you cawvids have just prooved mah theery of evolootion.”-
A note for the purists: I know the accent is a poor imitation, neither the crows nor Darwin came from Texas, and the crows are still crows so they don't prove the theory. But I would like to think this wonderful tale, which is offered free of charge to the world of all true believers and non-believers, teaches us that crows might be able to use sticks and leaves without needing to be preprogrammed 3.8 billion years ago.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 14:32 (2950 days ago) @ dhw


> 
> dhw: A note for the purists: I know the accent is a poor imitation, neither the crows nor Darwin came from Texas, and the crows are still crows so they don't prove the theory. But I would like to think this wonderful tale, which is offered free of charge to the world of all true believers and non-believers, teaches us that crows might be able to use sticks and leaves without needing to be preprogrammed 3.8 billion years ago. - I loved it! Just just a wishful tale by a great writer of books and plays, proving nothing as noted.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by BBella @, Sunday, March 20, 2016, 02:53 (2953 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: The same applies to all innovations: the cell communities must cooperate, whether programmed to do so by your God or making their own autonomous decisions.
> 
> Now you are telling me those 'cell communities' 'know' they must cooperate. Really? What instructs them?-Thoughts your question provoked:-"What instructs them?" The intelligence and wisdom gained through millions of years of evolution instructs them! Is that not enough to give one bird the creative, innovative intelligence to tie a knot? Some-thing IS instructing every-thing to be what it is and do what it does. We all agree, the some-thing that instructs/directs all living things has to be very wise and intelligent and must permeate all living entities. So, what ever "It" is has to be quite old (if not eternal) which means "it" has plenty of experience and memory about what works and what doesn't work. It displays itself through an intangible, immutable source we call consciousness that although it may always be intelligent, it shows signs of learning. Does this intelligence radiate from one point or from many? Did this intelligence begin as one or as many? -Whether intelligence has always been, or was sparked in one moment in a speck of light and matter connection before time began, or created all that IS or is All that Is, regardless - there should be no doubt, that when we look at what has been created and creations capabilities, that intelligence is definitely on a learning curve. Experience is every-thing. Without the memory of these experiences nothing exists to learn more. Intelligence learns and experiences and every thing benefits from it because everything is connected by intelligence. -Whether there was/is ONE intelligent being conducting/experiencing this experiment or many - does it really matter when we are ALL together in the midst of this great creative learning curve of transmutation of mind, emotions and matter? Whether it's only ONE mind watching all that IS, or All minds watching - we are all a-changing into the unknown.

Clever Corvids: unique beaks for tool use

by David Turell @, Sunday, March 20, 2016, 04:57 (2953 days ago) @ BBella

BBella: Whether there was/is ONE intelligent being conducting/experiencing this experiment or many - does it really matter when we are ALL together in the midst of this great creative learning curve of transmutation of mind, emotions and matter? Whether it's only ONE mind watching all that IS, or All minds watching - we are all a-changing into the unknown.-I still think you and I are very close together in our thinking. You are 'almost' describing my universal consciousness. At issue is the concept that IT is all knowing or learning, the latter an idea that dhw has brought up also.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by dhw, Monday, March 21, 2016, 11:17 (2952 days ago) @ BBella

dhw: The same applies to all innovations: the cell communities must cooperate, whether programmed to do so by your God or making their own autonomous decisions.
DAVID: Now you are telling me those 'cell communities' 'know' they must cooperate. Really? What instructs them?-BBELLA: Thoughts your question provoked:
"What instructs them?" The intelligence and wisdom gained through millions of years of evolution instructs them! Is that not enough to give one bird the creative, innovative intelligence to tie a knot? Some-thing IS instructing every-thing to be what it is and do what it does. We all agree, the some-thing that instructs/directs all living things has to be very wise and intelligent and must permeate all living entities. So, what ever "It" is has to be quite old (if not eternal) which means "it" has plenty of experience and memory about what works and what doesn't work. It displays itself through an intangible, immutable source we call consciousness that although it may always be intelligent, it shows signs of learning. Does this intelligence radiate from one point or from many? Did this intelligence begin as one or as many?-First of all, thank you for bringing a different dimension to our discussions. There is some dense thought here, which I find very attractive. I am a little queasy about the word “wise”, because it suggests sound judgement, as if ATI were somehow geared solely to goodness and beneficence. I see life very much as a mixture of good and bad, nice and nasty, and feel more at ease with a neutral “intelligence”! As for your two final questions, they are the hub of most of our discussions.-BBELLA: Whether intelligence has always been, or was sparked in one moment in a speck of light and matter connection before time began, or created all that IS or is All that Is, regardless - there should be no doubt, that when we look at what has been created and creations capabilities, that intelligence is definitely on a learning curve. Experience is every-thing. Without the memory of these experiences nothing exists to learn more. Intelligence learns and experiences and every thing benefits from it because everything is connected by intelligence.-I think this is a great approach, as it leaves all questions of origin, purpose and method wide open. Where I struggle a little is with the impression that intelligence or the “intangible, immutable source we call consciousness” somehow has an existence of its own. This straight away conjures up the idea of the single mind people call God (see David's comment), but I don't think that is what you mean, although it is one possible option. Intelligence is everywhere, and it provides a link between All That Is, but there has to be room in this concept for individuality. Individual intelligences have individual characteristics, memories, experiences (I'm not just talking about humans), and in that sense although all things are part of the great oneness, all things are also separate from it.
 
BBELLA: Whether there was/is ONE intelligent being conducting/experiencing this experiment or many - does it really matter when we are ALL together in the midst of this great creative learning curve of transmutation of mind, emotions and matter? Whether it's only ONE mind watching all that IS, or All minds watching - we are all a-changing into the unknown.-For religious people of course the alternatives matter enormously, and when I was very young they mattered enormously to me too. If there is a God, what is he like, and what does he want? Now, though, I am fascinated by the whole mystery without any of the “Angst” that pervades some religious approaches. Yours for me represents an enlightened form of agnosticism, in which one embraces the mystery and the wonderment of it all, and accepts the impossibility of knowing the answers - at least until “we have shuffled off this mortal coil”!-DAVID (in answer to BBella): I still think you and I are very close together in our thinking. You are 'almost' describing my universal consciousness. At issue is the concept that IT is all knowing or learning, the latter an idea that dhw has brought up also.-That is the danger of making intelligence or consciousness sound like a single mind. You, David, think BBella's concept is close to yours, whereas I see it as completely open - and therefore close to mine! The difference between an all-knowing and a learning “IT” still conjures up the image of intelligence as a single mind (I think process theology favours a learning God). The concept of intelligence being present in all things and linking all things allows for a single mind but, as I understand it, also allows for an infinite number of different minds without - and this is the crucial distinction - any central “authority”. But I hope BBella will clarify this for us.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by David Turell @, Monday, March 21, 2016, 15:30 (2952 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: That is the danger of making intelligence or consciousness sound like a single mind. You, David, think BBella's concept is close to yours, whereas I see it as completely open - and therefore close to mine! The difference between an all-knowing and a learning “IT” still conjures up the image of intelligence as a single mind (I think process theology favours a learning God). The concept of intelligence being present in all things and linking all things allows for a single mind but, as I understand it, also allows for an infinite number of different minds without - and this is the crucial distinction - any central “authority”. But I hope BBella will clarify this for us. - It is possible to have a single universal consciousness from which we draw our individual consciousnesses but are independent in our free will of action and thought. Process theology is not an unreasonable theory.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by dhw, Tuesday, March 22, 2016, 10:25 (2951 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: That is the danger of making intelligence or consciousness sound like a single mind. You, David, think BBella's concept is close to yours, whereas I see it as completely open - and therefore close to mine! The difference between an all-knowing and a learning “IT” still conjures up the image of intelligence as a single mind (I think process theology favours a learning God). The concept of intelligence being present in all things and linking all things allows for a single mind but, as I understand it, also allows for an infinite number of different minds without - and this is the crucial distinction - any central “authority”. But I hope BBella will clarify this for us.-DAVID: It is possible to have a single universal consciousness from which we draw our individual consciousnesses but are independent in our free will of action and thought. Process theology is not an unreasonable theory.-Agreed. Here's another not unreasonable theory: It is possible to have zillions of individual consciousnesses acting independently or in cooperation with one another, without their being a single consciousness that created them and preprogrammed them to fulfil its anthropocentric purpose.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by David Turell @, Tuesday, March 22, 2016, 15:15 (2951 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: It is possible to have a single universal consciousness from which we draw our individual consciousnesses but are independent in our free will of action and thought. Process theology is not an unreasonable theory.
> 
> dhw: Agreed. Here's another not unreasonable theory: It is possible to have zillions of individual consciousnesses acting independently or in cooperation with one another, without their being a single consciousness that created them and preprogrammed them to fulfil its anthropocentric purpose.-Still raises the same question for me: we can't even explain the presence of our consciousness and now you want it to pop up all over the place in all living matter!?

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by dhw, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 14:05 (2950 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: It is possible to have a single universal consciousness from which we draw our individual consciousnesses but are independent in our free will of action and thought. Process theology is not an unreasonable theory.-dhw: Agreed. Here's another not unreasonable theory: It is possible to have zillions of individual consciousnesses acting independently or in cooperation with one another, without their being a single consciousness that created them and preprogrammed them to fulfil its anthropocentric purpose.-DAVID: Still raises the same question for me: we can't even explain the presence of our consciousness and now you want it to pop up all over the place in all living matter!?-We can't explain the presence of any form of consciousness, but you want it simply to have been present all over the place for ever and ever!?

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by David Turell @, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 14:38 (2950 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Still raises the same question for me: we can't even explain the presence of our consciousness and now you want it to pop up all over the place in all living matter!?
> 
> dhw: We can't explain the presence of any form of consciousness, but you want it simply to have been present all over the place for ever and ever!?-My conjecture is that I cannot ever conceive of consciousness simply appearing on a rocky planet from evolving life. It must have pre-existed that process of evolution only to be rediscovered latter as brains developed to the point of being receivers of consciousness, per studies of NDE's.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by BBella @, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 19:56 (2949 days ago) @ dhw

I am a little queasy about the word “wise”, because it suggests sound judgement, as if ATI were somehow geared solely to goodness and beneficence. I see life very much as a mixture of good and bad, nice and nasty, and feel more at ease with a neutral “intelligence”! -I do believe there is a balance within ATI. I don't know why there would be, but I believe it is obvious in too many ways not to be. It's why I favor (allow for the possibilities of) karma, reincarnation, etc.
> 
> BBELLA: Whether intelligence has always been, or was sparked in one moment in a speck of light and matter connection before time began, or created all that IS or is All that Is, regardless - there should be no doubt, that when we look at what has been created and creations capabilities, that intelligence is definitely on a learning curve. Experience is every-thing. Without the memory of these experiences nothing exists to learn more. Intelligence learns and experiences and every thing benefits from it because everything is connected by intelligence.
> 
>dhw: I think this is a great approach, as it leaves all questions of origin, purpose and method wide open. Where I struggle a little is with the impression that intelligence or the “intangible, immutable source we call consciousness” somehow has an existence of its own. This straight away conjures up the idea of the single mind people call God (see David's comment), but I don't think that is what you mean, although it is one possible option. Intelligence is everywhere, and it provides a link between All That Is, but there has to be room in this concept for individuality. Individual intelligences have individual characteristics, memories, experiences (I'm not just talking about humans), and in that sense although all things are part of the great oneness, all things are also separate from it.-Completely agree.-> DAVID (in answer to BBella): I still think you and I are very close together in our thinking. You are 'almost' describing my universal consciousness. At issue is the concept that IT is all knowing or learning, the latter an idea that dhw has brought up also.
> 
> dhw: That is the danger of making intelligence or consciousness sound like a single mind. You, David, think BBella's concept is close to yours, whereas I see it as completely open - and therefore close to mine! The difference between an all-knowing and a learning “IT” still conjures up the image of intelligence as a single mind (I think process theology favours a learning God). The concept of intelligence being present in all things and linking all things allows for a single mind but, as I understand it, also allows for an infinite number of different minds without - and this is the crucial distinction - any central “authority”. But I hope BBella will clarify this for us.-I personally find it very difficult to believe there is ONE central intelligence (headquarters?) of authority. If there ever was ONE, for me, it would be no different than saying that at one time there was just one color and out of that one came many.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by David Turell @, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, 20:23 (2949 days ago) @ BBella

dhw:Intelligence is everywhere, and it provides a link between All That Is, but there has to be room in this concept for individuality. Individual intelligences have individual characteristics, memories, experiences (I'm not just talking about humans), and in that sense although all things are part of the great oneness, all things are also separate from it.
> 
> BBella: Completely agree.-If intelligence is everywhere as dhw states, it is not unreasonable to assume it is part of one united intelligence/consciousness, but each individual using their intelligence still is separated as shown by free will. Oneness yet disparate parts.
> 
> > DAVID (in answer to BBella): I still think you and I are very close together in our thinking. You are 'almost' describing my universal consciousness. At issue is the concept that IT is all knowing or learning, the latter an idea that dhw has brought up also.
> > 
> > dhw: The concept of intelligence being present in all things and linking all things allows for a single mind but, as I understand it, also allows for an infinite number of different minds without - and this is the crucial distinction - any central “authority”. But I hope BBella will clarify this for us.-The central authority is required to account for the Big Bang and the jumps in evolution (saltation).
> 
> BBella: I personally find it very difficult to believe there is ONE central intelligence (headquarters?) of authority. If there ever was ONE, for me, it would be no different than saying that at one time there was just one color and out of that one came man.-Light contains all colors, split out with prism.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by dhw, Thursday, March 24, 2016, 13:26 (2949 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Still raises the same question for me: we can't even explain the presence of our consciousness and now you want it to pop up all over the place in all living matter!?
dhw: We can't explain the presence of any form of consciousness, but you want it simply to have been present all over the place for ever and ever!?
DAVID: My conjecture is that I cannot ever conceive of consciousness simply appearing on a rocky planet from evolving life. It must have pre-existed that process of evolution only to be rediscovered latter as brains developed to the point of being receivers of consciousness, per studies of NDE's.-I have complete sympathy with your first sentence. However, although I have a pretty good imagination, I cannot conceive of a single, eternal, sourceless, conscious mind with the knowledge and ability to create billions of solar systems, having created a universe so vast that its boundaries (if it has any) are unknown. I am surprised that you or indeed anyone can. Hence my agnosticism.
 
dhw: I am a little queasy about the word “wise”, because it suggests sound judgement, as if ATI were somehow geared solely to goodness and beneficence. I see life very much as a mixture of good and bad, nice and nasty, and feel more at ease with a neutral “intelligence”! 
BBELLA: I do believe there is a balance within ATI. I don't know why there would be, but I believe it is obvious in too many ways not to be. It's why I favor (allow for the possibilities of) karma, reincarnation, etc.-I can't go beyond “allow for”, which covers my approach to most of the theories we discuss on this forum.-BBELLA: I personally find it very difficult to believe there is ONE central intelligence (headquarters?) of authority. If there ever was ONE, for me, it would be no different than saying that at one time there was just one color and out of that one came many.
DAVID: If intelligence is everywhere as dhw states, it is not unreasonable to assume it is part of one united intelligence/consciousness, but each individual using their intelligence still is separated as shown by free will. Oneness yet disparate parts.-I am delighted to hear that at long last you are accepting the idea that individual organisms use their intelligence with some sort of “free will”, or by individual are you only thinking of humans while all our weaverbirds and crows and cuttlefish are mere automatons preprogrammed by the CIA (Central Intelligence Almighty)? I think it is unreasonable to ASSUME that the zillions of intelligences are part of a single mind; that is one possibility among others. -DAVID: The central authority is required to account for the Big Bang and the jumps in evolution (saltation).-Required by whom? There are plenty of scientists and philosophers and other clever people who do not believe a central authority is required to account for the Big Bang (if it happened), or for saltation.

Clever Corvids: BBella's approach

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 24, 2016, 14:59 (2949 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: If intelligence is everywhere as dhw states, it is not unreasonable to assume it is part of one united intelligence/consciousness, but each individual using their intelligence still is separated as shown by free will. Oneness yet disparate parts.
> 
> dhw: I am delighted to hear that at long last you are accepting the idea that individual organisms use their intelligence with some sort of “free will”, or by individual are you only thinking of humans while all our weaverbirds and crows and cuttlefish are mere automatons preprogrammed by the CIA (Central Intelligence Almighty)? I think it is unreasonable to ASSUME that the zillions of intelligences are part of a single mind; that is one possibility among others. - All organisms with a brain are to varying degrees conscious and aware of their surroundings to avoid danger and survive. I was discussing consciousness at the human level. We are different in kind.
 
> 
> DAVID: The central authority is required to account for the Big Bang and the jumps in evolution (saltation).
> 
> dhw: Required by whom? There are plenty of scientists and philosophers and other clever people who do not believe a central authority is required to account for the Big Bang (if it happened), or for saltation. - Not a popularity contest. To each his own.

Clever Corvids: As clever as apes

by David Turell @, Tuesday, April 26, 2016, 19:41 (2915 days ago) @ David Turell

Another example:-https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/04/160426101527.htm-"A study led by researchers at Lund University in Sweden suggests that ravens can be as clever as chimpanzees, despite having much smaller brains, indicating that rather than the size of the brain, the neuronal density and the structure of the birds' brains play an important role in terms of their intelligence.-
"'Absolute brain size is not the whole story. We found that corvid birds performed as well as great apes, despite having much smaller brains," says Can Kabadayi, doctoral student in Cognitive Science.-"Intelligence is difficult to test, but one aspect of being clever is inhibitory control, and the ability to override animal impulses and choose a more rational behaviour. Researchers at Duke University, USA, conducted a large-scale study in 2014, where they compared the inhibitory control of 36 different animal species, mainly primates and apes. The team used the established cylinder test, where food is placed in a transparent tube with openings on both sides. The challenge for the animal is to retrieve the food using the side openings, instead of trying to reach for it directly. To succeed, the animal has to show constraint and choose a more efficient strategy for obtaining the food.
The team first trained the birds to obtain a treat in an opaque tube with a hole at each end. Then they repeated the test with a transparent tube. The animal impulse would naturally be to go straight for the tube as they saw the food. However, all of the ravens chose to enter the tube from the ends in every try. The performance of the jackdaws and the crows came very close to 100%, comparable to a performance by bonobos and gorillas.-"'This shows that bird brains are quite efficient, despite having a smaller absolute brain size. As indicated by the study, there might be other factors apart from absolute brain size that are important for intelligence, such as neuronal density," says Can Kabadayi, and continues:-"'There is still so much we need to understand and learn about the relationship between intelligence and brain size, as well as the structure of a bird's brain, but this study clearly shows that bird brains are not simply birdbrains after all!'"-Comment: It is the quality of the brain not the size.

Clever Corvids: due to neuron number and design

by David Turell @, Tuesday, June 14, 2016, 15:52 (2867 days ago) @ David Turell

The latest research shows that bird brains have more neurons in the frontal area than monkeys and a primate-like design pattern of the neuron networks:-https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160613153411.htm-"The first study to systematically measure the number of neurons in the brains of birds has found that they have significantly more neurons packed into their small brains than are stuffed into mammalian and even primate brains of the same mass. -"The macaw has a brain the size of an unshelled walnut, while the macaque monkey has a brain about the size of a lemon. Nevertheless, the macaw has more neurons in its forebrain -- the portion of the brain associated with intelligent behavior -- than the macaque.-"That is one of the surprising results of the first study to systematically measure the number of neurons in the brains of more than two dozen species of birds ranging in size from the tiny zebra finch to the six-foot-tall emu, which found that they consistently have more neurons packed into their small brains than are stuffed into mammalian or even primate brains of the same mass.-***-"Scientists were left with a generally unsatisfactory fallback position: Avian brains must simply be wired in a completely different fashion from primate brains. Two years ago, even this hypothesis was knocked down by a detailed study of pigeon brains, which concluded that they are, in fact, organized along quite similar lines to those of primates.-***-"'We found that birds, especially songbirds and parrots, have surprisingly large numbers of neurons in their pallium: the part of the brain that corresponds to the cerebral cortex, which supports higher cognition functions such as planning for the future or finding patterns. That explains why they exhibit levels of cognition at least as complex as primates," said Herculano-Houzel, who recently joined the Vanderbilt psychology department.-"That is possible because the neurons in avian brains are much smaller and more densely packed than those in mammalian brains, the study found. Parrot and songbird brains, for example, contain about twice as many neurons as primate brains of the same mass and two to four times as many neurons as equivalent rodent brains.-"Not only are neurons packed into the brains of parrots and crows at a much higher density than in primate brains, but the proportion of neurons in the forebrain is also significantly higher, the study found.-"'In designing brains, nature has two parameters it can play with: the size and number of neurons and the distribution of neurons across different brain centers," said Herculano-Houzel, "and in birds we find that nature has used both of them."-***-"One of the important implications of the study, the neuroscientist said, is that it demonstrates that there is more than one way to build larger brains. Previously, neuroanatomists thought that as brains grew larger neurons had to grow bigger as well because they had to connect over longer distances. "But bird brains show that there are other ways to add neurons: keep most neurons small and locally connected and only allow a small percentage to grow large enough to make the longer connections. This keeps the average size of the neurons down," she explained."-Comment: Brain size as a measure of intellectual function is out the window. It is a matter of neuron-packing and a more advanced network design.

Clever Corvids: Hawaiin species found

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 14, 2016, 19:56 (2774 days ago) @ David Turell

New Caledonian crows are very special using tools. Now another crow species in Hawaii is found as talented. They are geographically very far apart, and had a common ancestor 11 million years ago. This is probably learned behavior as a convergence in a species with great talent to begin with:-https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160914135925.htm-"An international team of scientists and conservation experts has discovered that the critically-endangered Hawaiian crow, or 'Alal?, is a highly proficient tool user, according to a paper published today in the scientific journal Nature.-***-"'We had previously noticed that New Caledonian crows have unusually straight bills, and wondered whether this may be an adaptation for holding tools, similar to humans' opposable thumb," Rutz elaborates. By searching for this tell-tale sign amongst some of the lesser-known corvid species, he quickly homed in on a particularly promising candidate for further investigation -- the 'Alal?.-***-"We tested 104 of the 109 'Alal? alive at the time, and found that the vast majority of them spontaneously used tools," says Masuda. Current evidence strongly suggests that tool use is part of the species' natural behavioural repertoire, rather than being a quirk that arose in captivity, according to Rutz: "Using tools comes naturally to 'Alal?. These birds had no specific training prior to our study, yet most of them were incredibly skilled at handling stick tools, and even swiftly extracted bait from demanding tasks. In many regards, the 'Alal? is very similar to the New Caledonian crow, which my team has been studying for over 10 years."-"Experts have applauded the 'tour de force' of controlled experiments. "Most studies in our field investigate just a handful of subjects, so it is truly mindboggling to see an entire species tested," comments Professor Thomas Bugnyar, a corvid expert at the University of Vienna, Austria, who was not involved in the study.-***-"The discovery of a second tool-using crow species finally provides leverage for addressing long-standing questions about the evolution of animal tool behaviour. "As crow species go, the 'Alal? and the New Caledonian crow are only very distantly related. With their last common ancestor living around 11 million years ago, it seems safe to assume that their tool-using skills arose independently," explains Rutz. "It is striking that both species evolved on remote tropical islands in the Pacific Ocean that lack woodpeckers and ferocious bird predators -- perfect conditions, apparently, for smart crows to become accomplished tool users!'"-Comment: Animals with bright brains can learn, develop simple tool techniques which then become instinct, as this study appears to show. No where near as complex as tying weaver nests, but an interesting comparison.

Clever Corvids: parrots using tools

by David Turell @, Wednesday, December 16, 2015, 01:26 (3048 days ago) @ dhw

Grinding with a stone:-http://phys.org/news/2015-12-evidence-tool-parrots.html-"Studying ten captive parrots, researchers in the Department of Psychology at York observed the birds adopt a novel tool-using technique to acquire calcium from seashells and also the active sharing of tools among themselves.-"The birds used small pebbles or date pits to grind calcium powder from the shells or to break off small pieces of shell to ingest. This behaviour, never before seen in this species, is the first evidence of a nonhuman using tools for grinding, and one of the few reports of nonhuman animals sharing tools directly.-***-"Five out of ten birds were documented using tools, placing either pebbles or date pits inside shells to grind against the shell, or using them as a wedge to break apart the seashell.-"Interest in the shells was greatest from March to mid-April, just before the breeding season - this may be due to calcium supplementation being critical for egg-laying. Researchers were therefore initially surprised to find that it was the males, not the females who showed the greatest interest in shells.-"However, observation of the parrots' breeding behaviour showed that males often engaged in regurgitative feeding of females before copulating with them, thus potentially passing on the calcium benefits.-"Megan Lambert, PhD student in York's Department of Psychology and lead author on the study, said: "The use of tools by nonhuman animals remains an exceedingly rare phenomenon. These observations provide new insights into the tool-using capabilities of parrots and give rise to further questions as to why this species uses tools.-"'Tool use could reflect an innate predisposition in the parrots, or it could be the result of individual trial and error learning or some form of social learning. Whether these birds also use tools in the wild remains to be explored, but ultimately these observations highlight the greater vasa parrot as a species of interest for further studies of physical cognition.'"-Comment: 'Exceedingly rare' but fascinating. Found in captivity, it may also occur in nature.

Clever Corvids: hooked tools & saving them

by David Turell @, Wednesday, December 23, 2015, 15:55 (3041 days ago) @ David Turell

Using tiny cameras crows are observed fashioning the hooks and there is evidence they save them:-http://phys.org/news/2015-12-crows-caught-camera-fashioning-special.html-"The pair developed tiny video 'spy-cameras' which were attached to the crows, to observe their natural foraging behaviour.-"They discovered two instances of hooked stick tool making on the footage they recorded, with one crow spending a minute making the tool, before using it to probe for food in tree crevices and even in leaf litter on the ground.-***-"'In one scene, a crow drops its tool, and then recovers it from the ground shortly afterwards, suggesting they value their tools and don't simply discard them after a single use." According to Rutz, this observation agrees with recent aviary experiments conducted by his group: "Crows really hate losing their tools, and will use all sorts of tricks to keep them safe. We even observed them storing tools temporarily in tree holes, the same way a human would put a treasured pen into a pen holder."-***-"They can use their bills to whittle twigs and leaves into bug-grabbing implements; some believe their tool-use is so advanced that it rivals that of some primates."

Clever Corvids: observe their dead

by David Turell @, Saturday, January 09, 2016, 05:26 (3024 days ago) @ David Turell

Crows gather around and observe their dead:-http://www.livescience.com/53283-why-crows-hold-funerals.html?cmpid=NL_LS_weekly_2016-1-08-The researchers went to great lengths to design the "threats" they used to test the crows. They set up feeding areas for urban wild crows and sent trained volunteers to visit, carrying different objects that were carefully selected to test the crows' alarm responses: taxidermy crows arranged in poses suggesting that they were dead, and taxidermy red-tailed hawks, which prey on crows, posed on a branch as though they were still alive.-***-The scientists conducted similar tests with another urban bird, the rock pigeon, and observed that they hardly even noticed when a dead pigeon was paraded in front of them, a dramatic contrast to the organized and negative reaction of the crows to the sight of a fallen comrade. And the crows were similarly unconcerned about the presence of a dead pigeon, reserving their scolding and mobbing for humans accompanying dead crows and suspected predators.-The study results suggest that not only do crows notice and react to the sight of a dead crow, but they also quickly learn to associate danger and threat with humans who appear in close proximity to dead crows, recognizing them as a distinct and different caws for alarm.-Comment: Crows are clever. Nothing more.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by David Turell @, Wednesday, February 03, 2016, 01:10 (2999 days ago) @ David Turell

An experiment in which Ravens are allowed to know another bird might be present to steal food from their cache, and how they react:-http://phys.org/news/2016-02-birds-theorize-minds.html-"The study, "Ravens Attribute Visual Access to Unseen Competitors," was published Feb. 2 in Nature Communications. It found that ravens guarded caches of food against discovery in response to the sounds of other ravens if a nearby peephole was open, even if they did not see another bird. They did not show the same concern when the peephole was closed, despite the auditory cues.-"The findings shed new light on science's understanding of Theory of Mind, the ability to attribute mental states - including vision - to others, said Cameron Buckner, assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Houston. Buckner is an author of the paper, along with Thomas Bugnyar and Stephan A. Reber, cognitive biologists at the University of Vienna.-***-"The ability to cache food is important to ravens, and previous research had shown they behave differently when they perceive a competitor watching. For example, when ravens are being watched, they hide food more quickly and are less likely to return to a previously made cache, both of which might reveal the location of a cache to a possible pilferer. If they do not think they are being watched, they spend more time on the task.-"This study involved two rooms, connected both by windows, which could be opened or covered, and by peepholes, which could be open or closed. The ravens were trained to look through the peepholes to observe a human experimenter making caches in the adjacent room. During the final phase of the test, both windows were covered but a peephole was open. A hidden speaker played sounds of a raven competitor, but no other bird was present. The subjects still cached as though they were being watched.-"'We show that ravens ... can generalize from their own experience using the peephole as a pilferer and predict that audible competitors could potentially see their caches (through the peephole)," the authors write. "Consequently, we argue that they represent 'seeing' in a way that cannot be reduced to the tracking of gaze cues."-"The findings offer needed information in several arenas, Buckner said, including evidence that ravens could serve as animal models in research involving social cognition.-"It also offers new evidence about the capacities involved in Theory of Mind and abstract thinking, Buckner said. "It could change our perception of human uniqueness, that we share some of that ability not just with chimpanzees and closely related species but also with a very different species."-"Buckner said the next step will be to see which other animals are capable of the kind of abstraction assessed in the peephole test, "especially humans, since we don't know when this ability emerges in childhood.-"'Finding that Theory of Mind is present in birds would require us to give up a popular story as to what makes humans special," he said. "But completing this evolutionary and developmental picture will bring us much closer to figuring out what's really unique about the human mind.'" -Comment: This study is straining at the bit. The birds hear other birds might be present. It doesn't take a very smart bird to recognize that a thief may be present nearby even if unseen and speedy caching is wise. Still those birds are bright.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by David Turell @, Friday, March 04, 2016, 21:50 (2968 days ago) @ David Turell

Another take on the same study:-https://www.newscientist.com/article/2076025-ravens-fear-of-unseen-snoopers-hints-they-have-theory-of-mind/-Comments:-"Theory of mind-"Nicola Clayton at the University of Cambridge, UK, says the study is beautifully designed, but so far no single study has shown unequivocally that any animal has theory of mind.-“'It's a case of converging evidence to bear on a problem,” she says. “But this study comes as close as any to showing so.”-"Martin Schmelz at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, says the study refutes a major argument against previous studies and shows exciting social cognitive abilities in ravens for the first time.-“'Ravens in this study are shown to attribute visual access to others, which is certainly one aspect of a theory of mind,” he says. “They don't have a human-like full-fledged theory of mind, but the authors are also not claiming this.'”-Comment: Cognitive, yes. Inference, possible.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by dhw, Saturday, March 05, 2016, 13:28 (2968 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Another take on the same study:-https://www.newscientist.com/article/2076025-ravens-fear-of-unseen-snoopers-hints-they-...-Comments:-"Theory of mind
"Nicola Clayton at the University of Cambridge, UK, says the study is beautifully designed, but so far no single study has shown unequivocally that any animal has theory of mind.
“'It's a case of converging evidence to bear on a problem,” she says. “But this study comes as close as any to showing so.”-"Martin Schmelz at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, says the study refutes a major argument against previous studies and shows exciting social cognitive abilities in ravens for the first time.
“'Ravens in this study are shown to attribute visual access to others, which is certainly one aspect of a theory of mind,” he says. “They don't have a human-like full-fledged theory of mind, but the authors are also not claiming this.'”-David's comment: Cognitive, yes. Inference, possible.-I'm delighted to inform you that I have just finished reading a 10,000-page volume entitled Animal Cognition by Professor Ivor Fatt-Grant from the University of the State of the Bleedinobvious. I wish I could repeat for you some of the thousands of examples he cites, resulting from his 25 years of research studying every known organism on the planet, but I'll just try to sum up his conclusions. Every single organism appears to be aware of its environment and generally to know if the environment is safe or threatening. Of course threats may come in many forms, but I will focus here only on those from other organisms. Professor Fatt-Grant observed that whenever an organism perceived any sort of threat from another organism, it took precautions to protect itself. He inferred from the combination of threat and precaution that the threatened organism was able to gauge the intentions of the threatening organism, and he points out that reading another organism's intentions entails reading the other organism's mind. The reading of intentions as a form of mind-reading is clearly an integral feature of what we call “theory of mind”. However, Professor Fatt-Grant was unable to find a single volume on the subject compiled by any of the non-human organisms or communities he studied, and as they did not speak any language he could understand, he concluded tentatively that only humans have a fully fledged theory (a witty pun used in the chapter on birds). From our point of view, though, the all-important conclusion of his study is that all organisms are cognitive and all organisms are able to draw inferences from their cognitive powers that influence their behaviour. He even goes so far as to claim that if organisms did not have these cognitive powers and the ability to act upon inferences drawn from their readings of and communication with the mental processes of other organisms (there are also long sections on the subjects of cooperation and symbiosis), they would not survive. I understand he is planning a sequel entitled: Why Do Humans Think That Only Humans Can Think?

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by David Turell @, Saturday, March 05, 2016, 14:48 (2968 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Professor Fatt-Grant observed that whenever an organism perceived any sort of threat from another organism, it took precautions to protect itself. He inferred from the combination of threat and precaution that the threatened organism was able to gauge the intentions of the threatening organism, and he points out that reading another organism's intentions entails reading the other organism's mind.-It doesn't take much thought to recognize a grizzly's intent when stumbling upon one on the trail. Luckily I've only seen them at a distance. -> dhw: The reading of intentions as a form of mind-reading is clearly an integral feature of what we call “theory of mind”.-All science research on psychology which studies theory of mind is in doubt:-http://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/03/psychologys-replication-crisis-cant-be-wished-away/472272/-"Technical discussion aside, I want to make two points here. First, the Reproducibility Project is far from the only line of evidence for psychology's problems. There's the growing list of failures to replicate textbook phenomena. There's publication bias—the tendency to only publish studies with positive results, while dismissing those with negative ones. There's evidence of questionable research practices that are widespread and condoned.-***-“'As someone who has been doing research for nearly twenty years, I now can't help but wonder if the topics I chose to study are in fact real and robust. Have I been chasing puffs of smoke for all these years? I have spent nearly a decade working on the concept of ego depletion, including work that is critical of the model used to explain the phenomenon. I have been rewarded for this work, and I am convinced that the main reason I get any invitations to speak at colloquia and brown-bags these days is because of this work. The problem is that ego depletion might not even be a thing.'”-Comment: All mind study is fuzzy-
> dhw: From our point of view, though, the all-important conclusion of his study is that all organisms are cognitive and all organisms are able to draw inferences from their cognitive powers that influence their behaviour.-Cognition to recognize danger. Born with it! Ask my newborn horses.-> dhw: I understand he is planning a sequel entitled: Why Do Humans Think That Only Humans Can Think? -Who is the publisher? I'd like a copy.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by dhw, Sunday, March 06, 2016, 17:28 (2967 days ago) @ David Turell

In response to the revelation that ravens are capable of thinking for themselves but “don't have a human-like full-fledged theory of mind”, I referred to Professor Ivor Fatt-Grant from the University of the State of the Bleedinobvious: - dhw: From our point of view, though, the all-important conclusion of his study is that all organisms are cognitive and all organisms are able to draw inferences from their cognitive powers that influence their behaviour. He even goes so far as to claim that if organisms did not have these cognitive powers and the ability to act upon inferences drawn from their readings of and communication with the mental processes of other organisms (there are also long sections on the subjects of cooperation and symbiosis), they would not survive. - DAVID: Cognition to recognize danger. Born with it! Ask my newborn horses. - Somehow I doubt if even newborn humans could come up with “a full-fledged theory of mind”. However, if it is not obvious that survival strategies, decision-making, problem-solving, cooperation, symbiosis etc. require thought, I shall advise my Professor Fatt-Grant to abandon his planned sequel (Why Do Humans Think That Only Humans Can Think?) and instead concentrate on proving that water is wet, the sun is hot, and it takes two to tango.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by David Turell @, Monday, March 07, 2016, 14:56 (2966 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Somehow I doubt if even newborn humans could come up with “a full-fledged theory of mind”. However, if it is not obvious that survival strategies, decision-making, problem-solving, cooperation, symbiosis etc. require thought, I shall advise my Professor Fatt-Grant to abandon his planned sequel (Why Do Humans Think That Only Humans Can Think?) and instead concentrate on proving that water is wet, the sun is hot, and it takes two to tango. - Jack the poodle has entered the fray: it is Spring and he has remembered where to look for lizards to chase. He certainly can contain ideas and memories. Just a vast difference in kind.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by dhw, Tuesday, March 08, 2016, 18:10 (2965 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Somehow I doubt if even newborn humans could come up with “a full-fledged theory of mind”. However, if it is not obvious that survival strategies, decision-making, problem-solving, cooperation, symbiosis etc. require thought, I shall advise my Professor Fatt-Grant to abandon his planned sequel (Why Do Humans Think That Only Humans Can Think?) and instead concentrate on proving that water is wet, the sun is hot, and it takes two to tango. - DAVID: Jack the poodle has entered the fray: it is Spring and he has remembered where to look for lizards to chase. He certainly can contain ideas and memories. Just a vast difference in kind. - As we have said many times before, I doubt if many people would claim that poodles, ants, elephants, humans and duckbilled platypus have the SAME ideas, memories, thoughts etc. as one another. The whole point here is that organisms DO have ideas, memories and thoughts. They are not automatons but thinking beings, and I am surprised that this is still news to some people.

Clever Corvids: a degree of abstract thought

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 22, 2016, 20:26 (2766 days ago) @ dhw

Brain studies of the birds show they can mimic human brain function in different regions because the birds do not have neo-cortex: - http://nautil.us/issue/40/learning/why-neuroscientists-need-to-study-the-crow - "Corvids, such as crows, ravens, and magpies, are among the most intelligent birds on the planet—the list of their cognitive achievements goes on and on—yet neuroscientists have not scrutinized their brains for one simple reason: They don't have a neocortex. The obsession with the neocortex in neuroscience research is not unwarranted; what's unwarranted is the notion that the neocortex alone is responsible for sophisticated cognition. Because birds lack this structure—the most recently evolved portion of the mammalian brain, crucial to human intelligence—neuroscientists have largely and unfortunately neglected the neural basis of corvid intelligence. - "This makes them miss an opportunity for an important insight. Having diverged from mammals more than 300 million years ago, avian brains have had plenty of time to develop along remarkably different lines (instead of a cortex with its six layers of neatly arranged neurons, birds evolved groups of neurons densely packed into clusters called nuclei). So, any computational similarities between corvid and primate brains—which are so different neurally—would indicate the development of common solutions to shared evolutionary problems, like creating and storing memories, or learning from experience. If neuroscientists want to know how brains produce intelligence, looking solely at the neocortex won't cut it; they must study how corvid brains achieve the same clever behaviors that we see in ourselves and other mammals. - *** - "Examining the activity of over 300 neurons in two birds, Nieder's team found that the crow's NCL activity matched that of a primate's prefrontal cortex: Both of the species' neurons activated the most during the presentation of the rule cue, while activating much less in response to the images themselves. Some neurons responded specifically to the match cue (blue circle or glissando) and others to the non-match (red circle or noise); importantly, the neurons from each species activated in the same fashion regardless of the cue's sensory modality (auditory or visual). Nieder's results imply that both crows and primates evolved to use the same computation, albeit through radically different machinery, to solve the problem of representing abstract information—in this case, auditory or visual rules to a game. - *** - "Regardless of the dots' size and position, their quantity got encoded: Specific NCL neurons reacted to specific numbers, and activity in the NCL reflected the crows' behavior. The birds made more mistakes, for example, when comparing neighboring numbers, especially when the numbers were large (for instance, four versus five). This could potentially be explained by the pattern of neural activity Nieder saw in the NCL: Neurons that reacted strongly to higher numbers were also more likely to be activated by neighboring numbers than those that reacted to small numbers. Perhaps most intriguingly, the same behavioral and neural results were previously found in the primate PFC. That suggests that radically different brains may also have the same neural basis for the difficulty they each have in distinguishing large quantities. - "If, as Nieder told me, “the codes in the avian NCL and the mammalian PFC are the same, it suggests that there is one best neuronal solution to a common functional problem”—be it counting or abstract reasoning. What's fascinating is that these common computations come from such different machinery. One explanation for this evolutionary convergence could be that—beyond some basic requirements in processing—the manner in which neurons are connected does not make much difference: Perhaps different wiring in the NCL and PFC still somehow leads to the same neural dynamics." - Comment: This is an example of evolutionary convergence in brain function. Crows and humans are very far apart in mental ability, but these findings are a fascinatingview of how evolution progresses.

Clever Corvids: and others in a review

by David Turell @, Sunday, December 04, 2016, 00:49 (2694 days ago) @ David Turell

Birds have mental skills that are amazing as research continues:

http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/47486/title/Birds-Have-Skills-Pre...

"For example, scientists have thoroughly documented the ability of Caledonian crows to use tools, a skill long believed to be employed only by humans. Similarly, researchers have shown that scrub jays remember past events and act accordingly. “And when it comes to numerical discriminations or word discriminations, pigeons have taken them all,” Scarf says.

"This year, Scarf, Colombo, and their colleagues tested pigeons’ ability to recognize patterns of letters that appear in the English language. Nearly every day for two years, Scarf trained four pigeons. He would place the birds in a box with a touch screen, and then present the animals with either a real or fake four-letter word, along with a star below the letters. If the word was real, the birds were to touch it with their beaks; if it was fake, they were to touch the star. If the subjects answered correctly, they would get a bit of wheat. At the end of the training, the pigeons were able to recognize dozens of words—including ones they had never seen before—with about 70 percent accuracy.

“'It’s quite a novel finding,” says Alex Kacelnik, who studies comparative cognition at the University of Oxford. “Showing that pigeons have, to a remarkable degree, the ability to process relations between letters in allowable or not allowable sequences is in my view extremely interesting.”

"Pigeons, of course, do not use written language, but Scarf suspects that they are accustomed to picking up patterns of visual objects. “The plasticity that seems to be inherent in not only the visual cortex of primates but also the visual cortex of pigeons makes them code letter pairs maybe like they would have coded object combinations or object features in the environment,” he says. Whether they are using the same part of the visual cortex that humans use to process words, however, remains to be seen, Scarf adds.

***

"Understanding how birds are capable of performing such advanced mental feats has proved tricky. For instance, in 1998, Nicky Clayton of the University of Cambridge and her colleagues found that scrub jays only searched for cached perishables soon after they had stored them, suggesting the birds think about the future and plan accordingly, but exactly how they do it remains a mystery.

***

"In some cases, it’s obvious that the birds are processing stimuli differently than humans are. Just this year, for example, Kacelnik and his University of Oxford colleague, zoologist Antone Martinho, showed that newborn ducklings imprinted the relative sizes and colors of two different objects: if they saw two equal-size objects when they were born, they will follow equal-size objects, even different ones, later in life. “This is a quite striking ability,” Kacelnik says. Such relational concepts are thought “to be only available to highly intelligent animals with a high level of training, and these animals do it in 15 minutes after they come out of the egg.'”

Comment: Finding this type of recognition ability in birds other than crows is not surprising. The question is how these birds developed the capacity, or was it given by God during evolutionary development.

Clever Corvids: and others. Chickens!

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 04, 2017, 01:03 (2663 days ago) @ David Turell

A review of research finds chickens can be seen as clever:

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10071-016-1064-4

In this paper, I have identified a wide range of scientifically documented examples of complex cognitive, emotional, communicative, and social behavior in domestic chickens which should be the focus of further study. These capacities are, compellingly, similar to what we see in other animals regarded as highly intelligent. They include:
1.
Chickens possess a number of visual and spatial capacities, arguably dependent upon mental representation, such as some aspects of Stage four object permanence and illusory contours, on a par with other birds and mammals.
 
2.
Chickens possess some understanding of numerosity and share some very basic arithmetic capacities with other animals.

3.
Chickens can demonstrate self-control and self-assessment, and these capacities may indicate self-awareness.
 
4.
Chickens communicate in complex ways, including through referential communication, which may depend upon some level of self-awareness and the ability to take the perspective of another animal. This capacity, if present in chickens, would be shared with other highly intelligent and social species, including primates.
 
5.
Chickens have the capacity to reason and make logical inferences. For example, chickens are capable of simple forms of transitive inference, a capability that humans develop at approximately the age of seven.
 
6.
Chickens perceive time intervals and may be able to anticipate future events.
 
7.
Chickens are behaviorally sophisticated, discriminating among individuals, exhibiting Machiavellian-like social interactions, and learning socially in complex ways that are similar to humans.
 
8.
Chickens have complex negative and positive emotions, as well as a shared psychology with humans and other ethologically complex animals. They exhibit emotional contagion and some evidence for empathy.

9.
Chickens have distinct personalities, just like all animals who are cognitively, emotionally, and behaviorally complex individuals.
 
This is not to imply that the cognitive mechanisms underlying all of these apparent similarities are equivalent across species. Nor does it imply that higher-level explanations are always able to provide a thorough explanation of cognitive mechanisms. In fact, higher-level cognition is, unarguably, intertwined with more basic capacities and it may be contended that they are inseparable in many ways. Shettleworth (2010) argues that there is always an interplay between more fundamental cognitive mechanisms, e.g., associative learning, and other higher-level capacities, e.g., abstract thought, and that many human abilities derive from very basic cognitive processes. But the present findings do tell us that chickens, like other birds, are similar, in many ways, to mammals in their ethological complexity and that there are a number of findings that speak to the possibility of more complex capacities in chickens than heretofore recognized.

Comment: Bird brain development is noted to be quite enhanced as birds evolved from dinosaurs.

Clever Corvids: ravens can remember and plan

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 13, 2017, 23:20 (2472 days ago) @ David Turell

Studies show they remember for many hours and plan:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2140668-ravens-can-plan-for-future-as-well-as-4-ye...

"Ravens can plan for future events at least as well as 4-year-old humans and some adult, non-human great apes.

"The birds did this in tasks they wouldn’t encounter in the wild, so it isn’t an adaptation to an ecological niche, but rather a flexible cognitive ability that evolved independently in birds and hominids, whose lineages diverged about 320 million years ago.

"Planning for future events requires the use of long-term memory for some anticipated future gain. For a long time, it was thought to be a uniquely human trait. Children begin showing such abilities when they are about 4. But it turned out that chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans have this ability too, making tools to use later on.

***

"Osvath and his colleagues wanted to see if ravens could plan for the future in tasks that aren’t their natural behaviours, such as tool use and bartering with humans.

"In one experiment, the ravens were first trained to use a stone to dislodge some dry dog food from a box. Later, the birds were shown a collection of objects, including the tool, without the box in sight. The researchers let the ravens select an object and 15 minutes later showed them the box at a different location with the reward in it. The birds had to drop the stone into the box to collect the food. The ravens succeeded, on average, in 11 of the 14 trials.

"The birds also took part in a bartering test. Again, they were first trained, in this case to exchange a token for a reward. Later, they had to select the correct token from a batch of objects, hold on to it for 15 minutes, and then exchange it with an experimenter to get a reward. The birds picked the correct token 143 out of 144 times, and were able to exchange about 77 per cent of the tokens for the reward.

"The researchers then increased the delay between the tool or token selection and its use to 17 hours. The ravens succeeded in the task nearly 90 per cent of the time.

"Crucially, the ravens were planning from the first trial onwards, suggesting that their success wasn’t due to habituation, says Osvath. “They can perform at the same levels as great apes, making a decision in the immediate situation for a future that will occur at another place,” he says.

“'This is new, very exciting evidence which we didn’t have before,” says Markus Boeckle at the University of Cambridge. “[It’s evidence] that general intelligence has also developed in birds. This is very important for understanding how intelligence evolves.'”

Comment: This study adds to the amazing intelligence these birds exhibit. It is not the size of the brain, but how it is connected inside.

Clever Corvids: handle probability better than we

by David Turell @, Wednesday, May 30, 2018, 19:03 (2152 days ago) @ David Turell

Using the Monty Hall test of three opportunities, they succeed better than we:

https://www.livescience.com/6150-pigeons-beat-humans-solving-monty-hall-problem.html

"The so-called Monty Hall problem is a well-known puzzle named after the original host of the game show "Let's Make A Deal," who presented contestants with three doors, one of which held a prize, the other two only goats. The prize and the goats were placed randomly behind the doors beforehand, and stayed where they were throughout. After the contestant made a guess, Monty Hall would always open one of the remaining doors that he knew did not contain the prize. The player was then always given the option of staying with their initial guess or switching to the other unopened door.

***

"To see why the apparently illogical choice of switching is actually better, one must understand that before the host opened one of the three doors, the contestant did not know the location of the prize, and thus when he or she chose a door, the contestant had a 1-in-3 chance of being right. That does not change even after the host opened a door. If the probability of the first door the contestant chose remained the same, and there were only two doors left, that meant the remaining unopened door must have had a 2-in-3 chance of being right — that is, it had twice the chance of holding the prize.

***

"To shed light on why humans often fall short of the best strategy with this kind of problem, scientists investigated pigeons, which often perform quite impressively on tasks requiring them to estimate relative probabilities, in some cases eclipsing human performance. Other animals do not always share the same biases as people, and therefore might help provide explanations for our behavior.

"Scientists tested six pigeons with an apparatus with three keys. The keys lit up white to show a prize was available. After the birds pecked a key, one of the keys the bird did not choose deactivated, showing it was a wrong choice, and the other two lit up green. The pigeons were rewarded with bird feed if they made the right choice.

"In the experiments, the birds quickly reached the best strategy for the Monty Hall problem — going from switching roughly 36 percent of the time on day one to some 96 percent of the time on day 30.

"On the other hand, 12 undergraduate student volunteers failed to adopt the best strategy with a similar apparatus, even after 200 trials of practice each.

***

"The scientists propose the curious difference between pigeon and human behavior might be rooted in the difference between classical and empirical probability. In classical probability, one tries to figure out every possible outcome and make predictions without collecting data. In empirical probability, one makes predictions after tracking outcomes over time.

"Pigeons likely use empirical probability to solve the Monty Hall problem and appear to do so quite successfully.

"'Different species often find very different solutions to the same problems," Herbranson said. "We humans have ways of tackling probability-based problems that generally work pretty well for us, the Monty Hall dilemma being one notable exception. Pigeons apparently have a different approach, one that just happens to be better suited to the Monty Hall dilemma."

"Empirical probability is a slower, less elegant, brute-force method that can be tricked by the kind of random fluctuations seen in real data, Herbranson said, but it doesn't employ any mental rules of thumb that can lead to traps such as the Monty Hall problem. In a similar way, the visual systems we depend on to quickly make sense of the world around us can lead to our susceptibility to visual illusions, he added.

"Indeed, the aforementioned mathematician Paul Erdos demonstrated the power of empirical probability nicely as well. According to his biography, Erdos refused to accept the explanations of colleagues for the correct solution, and was eventually convinced only after he was shown a simple computer simulation than ran the problem hundreds of times. In other words, "after Erdos approached the problem like a pigeon, he was able to embrace the right answer," Herbranson said."

Comment: Sometimes our built-in biases get in the way.

Clever Corvids: making new tool from memory

by David Turell @, Thursday, June 28, 2018, 19:31 (2122 days ago) @ David Turell

This is something humans can do, but crows do also:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2172852-crows-make-the-right-tool-by-remembering-t...

"New Caledonian crows can remember what a tool looks like and then make a new one just from memory. The skill to make a mental image of something and then recreate it in this way is something usually only seen in humans.

"These crows are known to make a wide range of tools, including hooked and barbed sticks. But, until now, it wasn’t clear how certain tool designs were passed through generations, as the crows did not seem to just imitate other crows. Sarah Jelbert of the University of Cambridge, UK, and her team wanted to see if the crows were able to remember effective tool designs and recreate them.

"The team trained eight wild crows by initially offering them a choice between two small and two larger pre-fabricated cardboard vouchers. The cardboard vouchers released a reward – some meat – when they slid it with their beaks into the slot of a dispenser. Half the birds were taught that the larger vouchers earned the rewards, and half learned that the smaller vouchers worked.

"When Jelbert offered the birds an oversized card that wouldn’t fit through the slot, the birds gripped it with their claws and ripped it into shape with their beaks to the size that had most recently worked for them—either the smaller vouchers or the slightly larger ones. “The only way they could do this was by memorising what the ideal shape should be,” says Jelbert.

"Rather than copying how other crows make tools, they learned by focusing on the tool itself. They recognised its usefulness, remembered what it looked like and worked out how to make it anew. This might explain how the tools become increasingly complex over time as crows hold a mental image of the right tool and then make slight changes, which are then picked up by future generations.

“'They are performing a new behaviour,” she says. “They’ve transferred experience of what works for them into a combination of memory and manufacturing ability.'”

Comment: Yes, very clever.

Clever Corvids: making new tool from memory

by David Turell @, Monday, July 02, 2018, 17:47 (2119 days ago) @ David Turell

Another take on it:

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/new-caledonian-crows-build-tools-from-mental...


"Crows from an island in the South Pacific are better than other avian species when it comes to crafting tools. Now, researchers propose that, unlike humans, New Caledonian crows don’t copy older members of the species to learn their trade but pick up tool making by taking a mental snapshot of the final product and manufacturing it in their own way.

"The researchers made a vending machine for the crows that doled out meaty rewards in exchange for particular sizes of card paper. The birds were trained to realize which sizes would result in a win. Next, the crows were given large sheets of paper that had to be ripped into smaller pieces in order to fit into the vending machine. The birds were given no hints about size this time around. However, the crows remembered the sizes of paper that had been productive previously and tore up the paper to match the winning sizes. This mental image that the New Caledonian crows seem to retain is called mental template matching.

“'If the crows remembered that a specific tool design worked and recreated it from memory, that could show how a culture of tool use might be spread throughout a population of birds,” Sarah Jelbert, who studies the cognitive behavior of animals at the University of Cambridge in the U.K. and a coauthor on the paper, tells BBC.

"According to The New York Times, the researchers need to provide more proof that the birds indeed carry out mental template matching. “This would seem to be experiment one in a series of other experiments,” Irene Pepperberg, who studies avian cognition at Harvard University and was not involved in this work, tells The Times.

"According to Gizmodo, Edward Wasserman, an experimental psychologist at the University of Iowa who was not involved in the study, says the findings were “clear and compelling,” while reiterating earlier avian research that implies birds are good at picking up tasks and memorizing them. Given that mammals and birds diverged millions of years ago, this would mean our last common ancestor was also intelligent or intelligence evolved in more than one way.

"According to the BBC, Jelbert agrees—intelligence may have taken different evolutionary routes."

Comment: It still takes brains to do the intellectual work.

Clever Corvids: inventing a tool to reach food

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 24, 2018, 20:25 (2004 days ago) @ David Turell

The research has crows putting pieces together to reach food:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/10/181024112201.htm

"The new study shows that these birds can create long-reaching tools out of short combinable parts -- an astonishing mental feat. Assemblage of different components into novel functional and manoeuvrable tools has, until now, only been observed in apes, and anthropologists regard early human compound tool manufacture as a significant step in brain evolution. Children take several years before creating novel tools, probably because it requires anticipating properties of yet unseen objects. Such anticipation, or planning, is usually interpreted as involving creative mental modelling and executive functions.

"The study demonstrates that this species of crow possess highly flexible abilities that allow them to solve complex problems involving anticipation of the properties of objects they have never seen. 'The finding is remarkable because the crows received no assistance or training in making these combinations, they figured it out by themselves,' says Auguste von Bayern, first author of the study from the Max-Planck-Institute for Ornithology and University of Oxford.

"The researchers presented eight New Caledonian crows with a puzzle box they had never encountered before, containing a small food container behind a door that left a narrow gap along the bottom. Initially, the scientists left some sufficiently long sticks scattered around, and all the birds rapidly picked one of them, inserted it through the front gap, and pushed the food to an opening on the side of the box. All eight birds did this without any difficulty. In the next steps, the scientists left the food deep inside the box but provided only short pieces, too short to reach the food. These short pieces could potentially be combined with each other, as some were hollow and others could fit inside them.

"Without any help or demonstration, four of the crows partially inserted one piece into another and used the resulting longer compound pole to reach and extract the food. At the end of the five-step investigation, the scientists made the task more difficult by supplying even shorter combinable parts, and found that one particular bird, 'Mango', was able to make compound tools out of three and even four parts.

"Although the authors explain that the mental processes by which the birds achieve their goals have not yet been fully established, the ability to invent a tool is interesting in itself. Few animals are capable of making and using tools, and also in human development the capacity only emerges late. While children start using tools reliably when they are about 18 months old, they only invent novel tools suited to solve a given problem reliably when they are at least five years old. Archaeological findings indicate that such compound tools arose only late in human cultural evolution (probably around 300,000 years ago in the Middle Palaeolithic) and might have coevolved with planning abilities, complex cognition and language. The crows' ability to construct novel compound tools does not imply that their cognitive mechanisms equal those of humans or apes, but helps to understand the cognitive processes that are necessary for physical problem solving."

Comment: This type of complex planning requires the ability to understand the future use of the parts, conscious reasoning. Caledonian crows are amazing, but they don't possess consciousness of our type. Obviously it is not the size of the brain that counts, but the quality of the neuronal activity, as shown by human neurons.

Clever Corvids: no! parrots inventing a tool to reach food

by David Turell @, Thursday, November 08, 2018, 23:50 (1989 days ago) @ David Turell

Cockatoos can make and use tools to reach food:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181107172905.htm

"The Goffin's cockatoo (Cacatua goffiniana) is a type of parrot. Captive Goffins are capable of inventing and manipulating tools, even though they aren't known to use tools habitually. The authors of the present study investigated two questions: do Goffins adjust tool properties to save effort, and if so, how accurately can they adjust tool dimensions for the task? The authors supplied six adult cockatoos with large cardboard sheets to tear into strips as tools for the testing apparatus: a food platform with a food reward set at varying distances (4-16cm) behind a small opening which also varied in width (1-2cm).

"They found that the Goffins were capable of adjusting the length of their cardboard strip tools to account for variations in food distance, making shorter tools when the reward was closer than when it was set farther away. In every case, if a first-attempt tool was too short, the second-attempt tool would be significantly longer. On average, all six birds made significantly longer tools than were required to reach the reward in all test conditions, with the birds tending to make increasingly long tools as the study progressed -- perhaps as a risk-avoidance strategy.

"However, only one bird was able to make a sufficiently-narrow tool to successfully reach the food reward when the opening was at its narrowest. The authors hypothesize that the shearing technique the birds use to tear the cardboard limits the narrowness of the resulting strips.

"Alice Auersperg adds: "The way they inserted and discarded manufactured pieces of specific lengths differently depending on condition suggests that the cockatoos could indeed adjust their tool making behavior in the predicted direction but with some limits in accuracy.' "

Comment: Another bird brain is shown to solve simple problems

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by David Turell @, Friday, November 23, 2018, 23:55 (1974 days ago) @ David Turell

Using more than one item to make a tool:

https://mindmatters.ai/2018/11/crows-can-be-as-smart-as-apes/

"Some (though not most) birds can learn new skills as readily as primates. New Zealand crows can create compound tools “by combining two or more otherwise non-functional elements, an ability so far observed only in humans and great apes”; they can though estimate sizes and shapes of paper for a reward, though they do not use paper in the wild.

"Some New Caledonian crows can use three tools in a row to reach food. As a result, some researchers have called crows “feathered primates.” New Zealand crows’ causal understanding (within limits) is said to rival that of 5-7 year old children. Or 7- to 10-year old children.
It’s not just crows, either. Pigeons can work with numbers up to nine with a success that is “indistinguishable from that displayed by monkeys.” Even the chicken’s intelligence “startles” some researchers (“communication skills on par with those of some primates”).

"Do such skills “redefine intelligence,” or explain “how technology evolved,” as sometimes claimed? Well, not really. It’s the same sort of intelligence as we find in primates but exhibited in a quite different brain structure:

"Corvids, such as crows, ravens and magpies, are among the most intelligent birds on the planet—the list of their cognitive achievements goes on and on—yet neuroscientists have not scrutinized their brains for one simple reason: They don’t have a neocortex. The obsession with the neocortex in neuroscience research is not unwarranted; what’s unwarranted is the notion that the neocortex alone is responsible for sophisticated cognition. Because birds lack this structure—the most recently evolved portion of the mammalian brain, crucial to human intelligence—neuroscientists have largely and unfortunately neglected the neural basis of corvid intelligence…

"If neuroscientists want to know how brains produce intelligence, looking solely at the neocortex won’t cut it; they must study how corvid brains achieve the same clever behaviors that we see in ourselves and other mammals.

"So brain structure cannot be the simple explanation we might have supposed. Can we turn to evolution for an explanation? Not really. We don’t know when, how, or why some birds started making and using stick tools so it’s hard to do more than speculate about the evolution of the trait.

"There’s another problem as well: The birds display these skills in a setting that humans have designed so that the birds might succeed (so that, in turn, the humans can publish in a science journal, of course). It’s fair to ask what role such focused, goal-oriented human intervention plays in increasing certain types of intelligence in the birds. The clear, systematic reward system not only exists but is designed to be apparent to the bird. Nature does not usually arrange such systems. If a bird seldom gets exactly the same test repeated in a natural state, its ability to learn may be frustrated, irrespective of its native intelligence.

"Some might respond by saying that only some species of birds are as clever as primates are with tools. That’s true, but then only some species of mammals are as clever as primates are about anything.

"We don’t know very much about intelligence in animals and birds but we do know that it is not a function of the mechanical organization of their brains. That raises a question: If artificial intelligence really came to exist, would it depend on the organization of the mechanism?"

Comment: Much more to the point is a mind that a works on problems are not a brain. IT always must be something more, as we know full well in humans.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by dhw, Saturday, November 24, 2018, 12:08 (1974 days ago) @ David Turell

Under "ants stop spread of illness":

DAVID: They avoid the sick ones:
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2186140-sick-ants-stay-clear-of-their-co-workers-t...

QUOTE: Simulations show that these changes in behaviour reduce the spread of infections and protect healthy workers and the queen from disease.
"Responses like this are to be expected in social insects, since only the queen reproduces, so evolution favours individual behaviour that benefits the whole colony.
“'I think we could learn from the social insects about ways to decrease transmission of disease at the scale of the population,” says Stroeymeyt. Although she concedes that the ants are good role models only up to a point. “We can’t really ask sick people to sacrifice themselves by dying in isolation like the ants do.'”

DAVID’s comment: What is not understood is how the ants recognize the infection, but there must be some stimulus that they recognize as a warning.

Thank you for yet another wonderful article about wonderful ants. They not only recognize the infection, but they have worked out ways of minimizing the overall effect. Sheer intelligence!

Under “clever corvids”:

QUOTE: "We don’t know very much about intelligence in animals and birds but we do know that it is not a function of the mechanical organization of their brains. That raises a question: If artificial intelligence really came to exist, would it depend on the organization of the mechanism?"

DAVID: Much more to the point is a mind that a works on problems are not a brain. IT always must be something more, as we know full well in humans.

Well, there can be no doubt that ants as well as corvids solve problems, so could it be that they have “something more”, and could it be that bacteria – probably of all our fellow creatures the most adept at solving problems – also have “something more"? Or could it even be that the materials of which cells (whether individual or multi) are made can produce a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts, i.e. intelligence?

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 24, 2018, 15:28 (1974 days ago) @ dhw

Under "ants stop spread of illness":

DAVID: They avoid the sick ones:
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2186140-sick-ants-stay-clear-of-their-co-workers-t...

QUOTE: Simulations show that these changes in behaviour reduce the spread of infections and protect healthy workers and the queen from disease.
"Responses like this are to be expected in social insects, since only the queen reproduces, so evolution favours individual behaviour that benefits the whole colony.
“'I think we could learn from the social insects about ways to decrease transmission of disease at the scale of the population,” says Stroeymeyt. Although she concedes that the ants are good role models only up to a point. “We can’t really ask sick people to sacrifice themselves by dying in isolation like the ants do.'”

DAVID’s comment: What is not understood is how the ants recognize the infection, but there must be some stimulus that they recognize as a warning.

dhw: Thank you for yet another wonderful article about wonderful ants. They not only recognize the infection, but they have worked out ways of minimizing the overall effect. Sheer intelligence!

No question they react with an intelligent solution, based on a warning stimulus. Do the ants know why they react the way they do? That would be a sign of true intelligence


Under “clever corvids”:

QUOTE: "We don’t know very much about intelligence in animals and birds but we do know that it is not a function of the mechanical organization of their brains. That raises a question: If artificial intelligence really came to exist, would it depend on the organization of the mechanism?"

DAVID: Much more to the point is a mind that works on problems are not a brain. IT always must be something more, as we know full well in humans.

dhw: Well, there can be no doubt that ants as well as corvids solve problems, so could it be that they have “something more”, and could it be that bacteria – probably of all our fellow creatures the most adept at solving problems – also have “something more"? Or could it even be that the materials of which cells (whether individual or multi) are made can produce a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts, i.e. intelligence?

The issue is still the same: a mind knows why the action is intelligent. That is true intelligence. Our outside judgement recognizes intelligent results which actually is our analysis of the action. The underlying process can be automatic or intelligent. No way around this.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by dhw, Sunday, November 25, 2018, 09:00 (1973 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Thank you for yet another wonderful article about wonderful ants. They not only recognize the infection, but they have worked out ways of minimizing the overall effect. Sheer intelligence!

DAVID: No question they react with an intelligent solution, based on a warning stimulus. Do the ants know why they react the way they do? That would be a sign of true intelligence

DAVID: Much more to the point is a mind that works on problems are not a brain. IT always must be something more, as we know full well in humans.

dhw: Well, there can be no doubt that ants as well as corvids solve problems, so could it be that they have “something more”, and could it be that bacteria – probably of all our fellow creatures the most adept at solving problems – also have “something more"? Or could it even be that the materials of which cells (whether individual or multi) are made can produce a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts, i.e. intelligence?

DAVID: The issue is still the same: a mind knows why the action is intelligent. That is true intelligence. Our outside judgement recognizes intelligent results which actually is our analysis of the action. The underlying process can be automatic or intelligent. No way around this.

That is not the issue at all. What is “true” intelligence, as opposed to intelligence? You have gone back to the great big wiggle of defining intelligence as self-awareness. There are degrees of intelligence, as you have admitted in the past when talking about your dog and corvids and other problem-solving creatures (problem-solving being the prime means by which scientists test for intelligence). But now apparently you think that only humans are intelligent.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 25, 2018, 19:47 (1972 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: The issue is still the same: a mind knows why the action is intelligent. That is true intelligence. Our outside judgement recognizes intelligent results which actually is our analysis of the action. The underlying process can be automatic or intelligent. No way around this.

dhw: That is not the issue at all. What is “true” intelligence, as opposed to intelligence? You have gone back to the great big wiggle of defining intelligence as self-awareness. There are degrees of intelligence, as you have admitted in the past when talking about your dog and corvids and other problem-solving creatures (problem-solving being the prime means by which scientists test for intelligence). But now apparently you think that only humans are intelligent.

You have misinterpreted my comment. We are back to the debate whether an action is understood as knowledgeably intended or automatic and the result of instinct. Those of us with consciousness know why we respond as we do. I've lived with dogs most of my life. When they lie down, on something soft or firm they inevitably curl their bodies and circle before they lie. The standard explanation which I can accept, is as wolves in a grassy areas, this action made a nice bed. I view it as pure instant , and my dogs never knew why they did it. They do understand some things. He just came to me and danced expectantly. I knew he hadn't been out in a while. He purposely danced and stared, because he has established a body language communication with me. We went out and the first think he did was pee. I agree he showed intelligent purpose. But he only has a minor degree of that, compared to me. So back to cells: they have no degree of cognitive understanding and therefore reacting with what looks intelligent but all they are doing is following an intelligent designed response to a stimulus.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by dhw, Monday, November 26, 2018, 11:50 (1972 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: The issue is still the same: a mind knows why the action is intelligent. That is true intelligence. Our outside judgement recognizes intelligent results which actually is our analysis of the action. The underlying process can be automatic or intelligent. No way around this.

dhw: That is not the issue at all. What is “true” intelligence, as opposed to intelligence? You have gone back to the great big wiggle of defining intelligence as self-awareness. There are degrees of intelligence, as you have admitted in the past when talking about your dog and corvids and other problem-solving creatures (problem-solving being the prime means by which scientists test for intelligence). But now apparently you think that only humans are intelligent. (now bolded by dhw)

DAVID: You have misinterpreted my comment. We are back to the debate whether an action is understood as knowledgeably intended or automatic and the result of instinct. Those of us with consciousness know why we respond as we do.

And that is what you called “true” intelligence. I challenge that concept and argue that there are degrees of intelligence. (Bold above)

DAVID: I've lived with dogs most of my life. [You then recount various experiences, but crucially you continue:) I agree he showed intelligent purpose. But he only has a minor degree of that, compared to me.

Precisely as I said: there are degrees of intelligence, as opposed to your "true intelligence". (Bold above)

DAVID: So back to cells: they have no degree of cognitive understanding and therefore reacting with what looks intelligent but all they are doing is following an intelligent designed response to a stimulus.

And so you go back to your “large organs chauvinism” (Shapiro) by repeating your belief - as if it were a fact - that cells merely follow your God’s instructions. “My” scientists specifically argue that cells do have a degree of cognitive understanding.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by David Turell @, Monday, November 26, 2018, 19:13 (1971 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: That is not the issue at all. What is “true” intelligence, as opposed to intelligence? You have gone back to the great big wiggle of defining intelligence as self-awareness. There are degrees of intelligence, as you have admitted in the past when talking about your dog and corvids and other problem-solving creatures (problem-solving being the prime means by which scientists test for intelligence). But now apparently you think that only humans are intelligent. (now bolded by dhw)

DAVID: You have misinterpreted my comment. We are back to the debate whether an action is understood as knowledgeably intended or automatic and the result of instinct. Those of us with consciousness know why we respond as we do.

dhw: And that is what you called “true” intelligence. I challenge that concept and argue that there are degrees of intelligence. (Bold above)

Of course, but I'm referring to the ability to have introspection and an understanding of why we decide to do what we do.


DAVID: I've lived with dogs most of my life. [You then recount various experiences, but crucially you continue:) I agree he showed intelligent purpose. But he only has a minor degree of that, compared to me.

dhw: Precisely as I said: there are degrees of intelligence, as opposed to your "true intelligence". (Bold above)

DAVID: So back to cells: they have no degree of cognitive understanding and therefore reacting with what looks intelligent but all they are doing is following an intelligent designed response to a stimulus.

dhw: And so you go back to your “large organs chauvinism” (Shapiro) by repeating your belief - as if it were a fact - that cells merely follow your God’s instructions. “My” scientists specifically argue that cells do have a degree of cognitive understanding.

Which is only their stated opinion , but never proof or fact, based on their studies which I have reviewed. Cells are automated factories, which is all they have shown. The 'intelligence' is a human interpretation of the studied logical reactions. If they weren't logically working there would be nothing alive.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by dhw, Tuesday, November 27, 2018, 15:42 (1971 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: We are back to the debate whether an action is understood as knowledgeably intended or automatic and the result of instinct. Those of us with consciousness know why we respond as we do.

dhw: And that is what you called “true” intelligence. I challenge that concept and argue that there are degrees of intelligence.

DAVID: Of course, but I'm referring to the ability to have introspection and an understanding of why we decide to do what we do.

Yes, I know you are. And I am pointing out that there are degrees of intelligence, and the fact that as far as we know we are the only species to have introspection etc. does not mean that other organisms, including cells, are not intelligent.

DAVID: So back to cells: they have no degree of cognitive understanding and therefore reacting with what looks intelligent but all they are doing is following an intelligent designed response to a stimulus.

dhw: And so you go back to your “large organs chauvinism” (Shapiro) by repeating your belief - as if it were a fact - that cells merely follow your God’s instructions. “My” scientists specifically argue that cells do have a degree of cognitive understanding.

DAVID: Which is only their stated opinion , but never proof or fact, based on their studies which I have reviewed. Cells are automated factories, which is all they have shown. The 'intelligence' is a human interpretation of the studied logical reactions. If they weren't logically working there would be nothing alive.

Cells are automated factories” is neither proven nor factual: it is your stated opinion. You have agreed many times that this is 50/50, and your interpretation is no more and no less human than theirs - unless you are not human, but having had the privilege of meeting you in person, I will swear to my dying day that you are as human as I am! And yes, if cells didn’t work logically, they wouldn’t survive. That can hardly mean they are incapable of logical thought.

Clever Corvids: more on how clever

by David Turell @, Tuesday, November 27, 2018, 17:22 (1971 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: We are back to the debate whether an action is understood as knowledgeably intended or automatic and the result of instinct. Those of us with consciousness know why we respond as we do.

dhw: And that is what you called “true” intelligence. I challenge that concept and argue that there are degrees of intelligence.

DAVID: Of course, but I'm referring to the ability to have introspection and an understanding of why we decide to do what we do.

Yes, I know you are. And I am pointing out that there are degrees of intelligence, and the fact that as far as we know we are the only species to have introspection etc. does not mean that other organisms, including cells, are not intelligent.

DAVID: So back to cells: they have no degree of cognitive understanding and therefore reacting with what looks intelligent but all they are doing is following an intelligent designed response to a stimulus.

dhw: And so you go back to your “large organs chauvinism” (Shapiro) by repeating your belief - as if it were a fact - that cells merely follow your God’s instructions. “My” scientists specifically argue that cells do have a degree of cognitive understanding.

DAVID: Which is only their stated opinion , but never proof or fact, based on their studies which I have reviewed. Cells are automated factories, which is all they have shown. The 'intelligence' is a human interpretation of the studied logical reactions. If they weren't logically working there would be nothing alive.

dhw: “Cells are automated factories” is neither proven nor factual: it is your stated opinion. You have agreed many times that this is 50/50, and your interpretation is no more and no less human than theirs - unless you are not human, but having had the privilege of meeting you in person, I will swear to my dying day that you are as human as I am! And yes, if cells didn’t work logically, they wouldn’t survive. That can hardly mean they are incapable of logical thought.

Or totally automated. Take your choice.

Clever Corvids: estimating weight after training

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 09, 2019, 21:48 (1927 days ago) @ David Turell

They were trained to recognize heavy or light:

"A team of researchers with members affiliated with the University of Auckland, the University of Cambridge, Bertha von Suttner University and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History has found evidence that suggests New Caledonian crows can infer the weight of an object by watching how it behaves in the wind.

***

"Humans can easily gauge the weight of objects by their behavior under windy conditions. In breezy conditions, a napkin will fly off a table at an outdoor café, for example, but a fork generally will not. We prepare for this eventuality by placing something heavy on the napkin, but not on the fork. But until now, no other creature has been found to have this ability.

"To find out if New Caledonian crows might have this ability, the researchers went out into the wild and captured 12 specimens and brought them back to their lab. All of the birds were taught to use the weight of an object as the criteria needed in order to receive a food reward. Half were taught that the lighter of two objects was needed, while the other half were taught that it was the heavier object that was needed to get their reward.

"Next, the researchers strung the same objects a few inches off the ground, one by one, and pointed a fan at them to simulate a breeze. The light objects would blow around easily, while the heavy ones remained stationary. The birds were then brought individually into the test area. Each watched as two objects were blown by the fan—the crows were then allowed to pick one of the objects as a means for receiving their treat.

"The researchers report that the birds were 73 percent correct in choosing the object that would get them their reward, all without having touched the objects prior to choosing them. They claim that this very strongly suggests that the birds were able to figure out which of the objects were heavier and which were lighter simply by watching how they behaved under windy conditions."

Comment: Amazing as usual.

Clever Corvids: controlling song calls

by David Turell @, Tuesday, August 27, 2019, 19:17 (1698 days ago) @ David Turell

Corvids can be trained to alter calls to respond to stimuli:

https://phys.org/news/2019-08-crows-consciously.html

"Crows can voluntarily control the release and onset of their calls, suggesting that songbird vocalizations are under cognitive control, according to a study...

"In the new study, Brecht and colleagues directly tested the idea that songbirds deliberately control their calls, in the sense that they can be emitted or inhibited at will, as opposed to being knee-jerk responses to food, mates, or predators.

"The findings show that trained carrion crows (Corvus corone), songbirds of the corvid family, can exert control over their calls in a goal-directed manner. In a detection task, three male carrion crows rapidly learned to emit calls in response to a visual cue (colored squares) with no inherent meaning ("go-trials"), and to withhold calls in response to another cue. Two of these crows were then trained on a task with the cue colors reversed, in addition to being rewarded for withholding vocalizations to yet another cue ("nogo-trials").

"Vocalizations in response to the detection of the go-cue were precise timed and highly reliable in all three crows. The crows also quickly learned to withhold calls in nogo-trials, showing that vocalizations weren't produced by an anticipation of a food reward in correct trials. According to the authors, further work is needed to evaluate the neurobiological basis of such cognitive vocal control in birds.

"'Our study shows that crows can be thaught to control their vocalizations, just like primates can, and that their vocalizations are not just a reflexive response. This finding not only demonstrates once again the cognitive sophistication of the birds of the crow family. It also advances our understanding of the evolution of vocal control.'"

Comment: Amazingly clever as usual.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Thursday, September 24, 2020, 22:28 (1303 days ago) @ David Turell

The Avian equivalent of our brain's cortex does exist:

https://science.sciencemag.org/content/369/6511/1567?utm_campaign=toc_sci-mag_2020-09-2...

"birds, and particularly corvids (such as ravens), are as cognitively capable as monkeys (1) and even great apes (2). Because their neurons are smaller, the pallium of songbirds and parrots actually comprises many more information-processing neuronal units than the equivalent-sized mammalian cortices.

***

"Birds do have a cerebral cortex, in the sense that both their pallium and the mammalian counterpart are enormous neuronal populations derived from the same dorsal half of the second neuromere in neural tube development

***

"In both birds and mammals, the pallium is the population of neurons that are not a necessary part of the most fundamental circuits that operate the body. But because the pallium receives copies, through the thalamus, of all that goes on elsewhere, these pallial neurons create new associations that endow animal behavior with flexibility and complexity. So far, it appears that the more neurons there are in the pallium as a whole, regardless of pallial, brain, or body size, the more cognitive capacity is exhibited by the animal. Humans remain satisfyingly on top: Despite having only half the mass of an elephant pallium, the human version still has three times its number of neurons, averaging 16 billion. Corvids and parrots have upwards of half a billion neurons in their pallia and can have as many as 1 or 2 billion—like monkeys.

"Additionally, it has been known since 2013 that the circuits formed by the pallial neurons are functionally organized in a similar manner in birds as they are in mammals (10). Using resting-state neuroimaging to infer functional connectivity, the pigeon pallium was shown to be functionally organized and internally connected just like a mouse, monkey, or human pallium, with sensory areas, effector areas, richly interconnected hubs, and highly associative areas in the hippocampus and nidopallium caudolaterale. The nidopallium caudolaterale is the equivalent of the monkey prefrontal cortex (10), the portion of the pallium that is the seat of the ability to act on thoughts, feelings, and decisions, according to the current reality informed by the senses.

***

"...the same is true of consciousness: The underpinnings are there whenever there is a pallium, or something connected like a pallium, with associative orthogonal short- and long-range loops on top of the rest of the brain that add flexibility and complexity to behavior. But the level of that complexity, and the extent to which new meanings and possibilities arise, should still scale with the number of units in the system. This would be analogous to the combined achievements of the human species when it consisted of just a few thousand individuals, versus the considerable achievements of 7 billion today".

Comment: We knew birds were smart, and now we know why. Part of me is very interested in the bolded comment at the end. Hominins and homos were in small population numbers before we advanced 50,000 years ago and began to build a large population. This fits Gould's concept of small isolated populations causing rapid or large evolutionary advances. What is weird is that a small population is like to have less mutations than a large population, but large brains appeared anyway. That support the concept of a driving force like God. The other point is it is teh volume of neurons that make a difference. Size, by itself, is not a major guide to brain capacity as the first bold shows.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Friday, September 25, 2020, 12:32 (1303 days ago) @ David Turell

Thank you for yet another stimulating article. It touches on quite a few of our issues.

QUOTE: So far, it appears that the more neurons there are in the pallium as a whole, regardless of pallial, brain, or body size, the more cognitive capacity is exhibited by the animal. (David’s bold)

This is a major factor in the debate between materialism and dualism. Does consciousness/ intelligence/cognitive capacity arise out of the neurons, or do the neurons multiply in accordance with the demands of a conscious intelligence? (NB that does not mean that our fellow animals have the same DEGREE of consciousness/intelligence as ourselves.) Were ancient corvids as intelligent as modern corvids, and did they have the same number of neurons? No way of knowing. What researchers could find out, though, would be whether corvid brains, just like human brains, complexify in response to new requirements (e.g. when they solve specific problems).

DAVID: We knew birds were smart, and now we know why. Part of me is very interested in the bolded comment at the end. Hominins and homos were in small population numbers before we advanced 50,000 years ago and began to build a large population. This fits Gould's concept of small isolated populations causing rapid or large evolutionary advances.

This was the point I made about the Cape Verde people developing immunity to malaria. We seem to be in agreement, and this has major implications for the whole of evolution. You had asked why humans evolved while apes remained the same, and I responded that conditions may have forced local groups to descend from the trees while elsewhere the apes lived happy ever after.

DAVID: What is weird is that a small population is like to have less mutations than a large population, but large brains appeared anyway. That supports the concept of a driving force like God.

What is weird is that according to you, the driving force behind corvid intelligence and that of every other form of intelligence was your God's one and only desire to design sapiens intelligence. They were all "part of the goal of evolving humans". I would suggest that in all instances, the driving force was the urge of the cell communities to improve their chances of survival by using the intelligence your God may have provided them with from the beginning.

DAVID: The other point is it is teh volume of neurons that make a difference. Size, by itself, is not a major guide to brain capacity as the first bold shows.

Just to link this to our "brain expansion" thread: there is a limit to the number of cells each skull can contain. A corvid presumably wouldn’t be able to fly if its head doubled in size, and so I have proposed that the human skull eventually stopped expanding because further expansion would have created problems for the rest of the anatomy. For other implications concerning volume, see my first comment above.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Saturday, September 26, 2020, 00:08 (1302 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Thank you for yet another stimulating article. It touches on quite a few of our issues.

QUOTE: So far, it appears that the more neurons there are in the pallium as a whole, regardless of pallial, brain, or body size, the more cognitive capacity is exhibited by the animal. (David’s bold)

dhw: This is a major factor in the debate between materialism and dualism. Does consciousness/ intelligence/cognitive capacity arise out of the neurons, or do the neurons multiply in accordance with the demands of a conscious intelligence? (NB that does not mean that our fellow animals have the same DEGREE of consciousness/intelligence as ourselves.) Were ancient corvids as intelligent as modern corvids, and did they have the same number of neurons? No way of knowing. What researchers could find out, though, would be whether corvid brains, just like human brains, complexify in response to new requirements (e.g. when they solve specific problems).

Bold is unknown as yet, but their current brain complexity allows what they can do. Which translates into my view that what level of mental complexity occurs is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design. One can only work with what is given. We work with a brain given to us at least 315,000 years ago and its complexity allowed what has subsequently happened.


DAVID: We knew birds were smart, and now we know why. Part of me is very interested in the bolded comment at the end. Hominins and homos were in small population numbers before we advanced 50,000 years ago and began to build a large population. This fits Gould's concept of small isolated populations causing rapid or large evolutionary advances.

dhw: This was the point I made about the Cape Verde people developing immunity to malaria. We seem to be in agreement, and this has major implications for the whole of evolution. You had asked why humans evolved while apes remained the same, and I responded that conditions may have forced local groups to descend from the trees while elsewhere the apes lived happy ever after.

But note the conflict with Gould's thinking I mentioned in the Neanderthal Y entry today:

"Neanderthals had smaller populations than moderns, and small populations tend to accumulate deleterious mutations, especially on the X and Y sex chromosomes".


DAVID: What is weird is that a small population is like to have less mutations than a large population, but large brains appeared anyway. That supports the concept of a driving force like God.

dhw: What is weird is that according to you, the driving force behind corvid intelligence and that of every other form of intelligence was your God's one and only desire to design sapiens intelligence. They were all "part of the goal of evolving humans". I would suggest that in all instances, the driving force was the urge of the cell communities to improve their chances of survival by using the intelligence your God may have provided them with from the beginning.

'
My same disagreement. Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.


DAVID: The other point is it is the volume of neurons that make a difference. Size, by itself, is not a major guide to brain capacity as the first bold shows.

dhw: Just to link this to our "brain expansion" thread: there is a limit to the number of cells each skull can contain. A corvid presumably wouldn’t be able to fly if its head doubled in size, and so I have proposed that the human skull eventually stopped expanding because further expansion would have created problems for the rest of the anatomy. For other implications concerning volume, see my first comment above.

Based on corvid brain size and what they can do, as I think with humans, a slight skull enlargement is anatomically possible but not necessary because the current brains work so well. Your harping on skull size is a side issue. Neanderthal skulls were much bigger and our earlier brains were also larger. So what! Our brains are at final size since IMHO speciation is over as is major evolution. All that is left are minor adaptations

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Saturday, September 26, 2020, 12:30 (1302 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Thank you for yet another stimulating article. It touches on quite a few of our issues.

QUOTE: So far, it appears that the more neurons there are in the pallium as a whole, regardless of pallial, brain, or body size, the more cognitive capacity is exhibited by the animal. (David’s bold)

dhw: This is a major factor in the debate between materialism and dualism. Does consciousness/ intelligence/cognitive capacity arise out of the neurons, or do the neurons multiply in accordance with the demands of a conscious intelligence? (NB that does not mean that our fellow animals have the same DEGREE of consciousness/intelligence as ourselves.) Were ancient corvids as intelligent as modern corvids, and did they have the same number of neurons? No way of knowing. What researchers could find out, though, would be whether corvid brains, just like human brains, complexify in response to new requirements (e.g. when they solve specific problems).

DAVID: Bold is unknown as yet, but their current brain complexity allows what they can do. Which translates into my view that what level of mental complexity occurs is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design. One can only work with what is given. We work with a brain given to us at least 315,000 years ago and its complexity allowed what has subsequently happened.

I agree that the brain’s complexity, neuron numbers and networks allow what any of us can DO and determine what we can work with. The great question is whether they allow what any of us can THINK, and surprisingly you argue that they are the base which determines the level of mental complexity. “Surprisingly” because this clashes with the dualism you always claim to espouse. If the soul exists, I would agree that its thoughts are restricted by experience and by the information the brain has provided, but not that it is incapable of coming up with new ideas based on existing experiences and information. We have been over this so many times that further discussion can only mean yet more repetition. But perhaps we can shorten it with a simple question: do you believe the thoughts of your dualist’s soul are restricted by the numbers of neurons and their networks?

dhw: What is weird is that according to you, the driving force behind corvid intelligence and that of every other form of intelligence was your God's one and only desire to design sapiens intelligence. They were all "part of the goal of evolving humans". I would suggest that in all instances, the driving force was the urge of the cell communities to improve their chances of survival by using the intelligence your God may have provided them with from the beginning.

DAVID: My same disagreement. Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

DAVID: The other point is it is the volume of neurons that make a difference. Size, by itself, is not a major guide to brain capacity as the first bold shows.

dhw: Just to link this to our "brain expansion" thread: there is a limit to the number of cells each skull can contain. A corvid presumably wouldn’t be able to fly if its head doubled in size, and so I have proposed that the human skull eventually stopped expanding because further expansion would have created problems for the rest of the anatomy. For other implications concerning volume, see my first comment above.

DAVID: Based on corvid brain size and what they can do, as I think with humans, a slight skull enlargement is anatomically possible but not necessary because the current brains work so well. Your harping on skull size is a side issue. Neanderthal skulls were much bigger and our earlier brains were also larger. So what! Our brains are at final size since IMHO speciation is over as is major evolution. All that is left are minor adaptations.

I was only referring to the question of why our brains stopped expanding. This is an integral part of the discussion on the subject of brain expansion.

QUOTE: "With our study we show that cognitive abilities cannot be generalized, but that
species instead differ in domain-specific cognitive skills," says Claudia Fichtel, one of the two first authors of the study funded by the German Research Foundation. "Accordingly, the relationship between brain size and cognitive abilities cannot be generalized.
'"

DAVID: The corvids show it is not bulk size but neuron count and network complexity But as humans show overall bulk does help if enough neurons and networks are added. The elephants and whales lack that additive.

The bold is an important observation in the context of my speculations about evolution and intelligence. Firstly, there are different types of intelligence, and the fact that ants, for instance, only have tiny brains does not mean they do not have the intelligence to work out their own strategies for survival. But I would go even further. Bacteria and other single cells don’t have brains at all, but as you know, I propose that they do have intelligence, i.e. that somewhere within that tiny space is the equivalent of a brain. And that would explain how single cells can also differ in “domain-specific cognitive skills”.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Saturday, September 26, 2020, 20:36 (1301 days ago) @ dhw
edited by David Turell, Saturday, September 26, 2020, 20:42

DAVID: their current brain complexity allows what they can do. Which translates into my view that what level of mental complexity occurs is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design. One can only work with what is given. We work with a brain given to us at least 315,000 years ago and its complexity allowed what has subsequently happened.

I agree that the brain’s complexity, neuron numbers and networks allow what any of us can DO and determine what we can work with. The great question is whether they allow what any of us can THINK, and surprisingly you argue that they are the base which determines the level of mental complexity. “Surprisingly” because this clashes with the dualism you always claim to espouse. '''perhaps we can shorten it with a simple question: do you believe the thoughts of your dualist’s soul are restricted by the numbers of neurons and their networks?

Why ask again: I've always said the soul can only work with the brain it is given, complexity of concept limited by brain complexity. My dualism has not changed.


dhw: What is weird is that according to you, the driving force behind corvid intelligence and that of every other form of intelligence was your God's one and only desire to design sapiens intelligence. They were all "part of the goal of evolving humans". I would suggest that in all instances, the driving force was the urge of the cell communities to improve their chances of survival by using the intelligence your God may have provided them with from the beginning.

DAVID: My same disagreement. Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

dhw: And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

Your usual backwards approach. All of evolution was designed by God to eventually reach the goal of humans.


DAVID: The other point is it is the volume of neurons that make a difference. Size, by itself, is not a major guide to brain capacity as the first bold shows.

dhw: Just to link this to our "brain expansion" thread: there is a limit to the number of cells each skull can contain. A corvid presumably wouldn’t be able to fly if its head doubled in size, and so I have proposed that the human skull eventually stopped expanding because further expansion would have created problems for the rest of the anatomy. For other implications concerning volume, see my first comment above.

DAVID: Based on corvid brain size and what they can do, as I think with humans, a slight skull enlargement is anatomically possible but not necessary because the current brains work so well. Your harping on skull size is a side issue. Neanderthal skulls were much bigger and our earlier brains were also larger. So what! Our brains are at final size since IMHO speciation is over as is major evolution. All that is left are minor adaptations.

dhw: I was only referring to the question of why our brains stopped expanding. This is an integral part of the discussion on the subject of brain expansion.

QUOTE: "With our study we show that cognitive abilities cannot be generalized, but that
species instead differ in domain-specific cognitive skills," says Claudia Fichtel, one of the two first authors of the study funded by the German Research Foundation. "Accordingly, the relationship between brain size and cognitive abilities cannot be generalized.
'"

DAVID: The corvids show it is not bulk size but neuron count and network complexity But as humans show overall bulk does help if enough neurons and networks are added. The elephants and whales lack that additive.

dhw: The bold is an important observation in the context of my speculations about evolution and intelligence. Firstly, there are different types of intelligence, and the fact that ants, for instance, only have tiny brains does not mean they do not have the intelligence to work out their own strategies for survival. But I would go even further. Bacteria and other single cells don’t have brains at all, but as you know, I propose that they do have intelligence, i.e. that somewhere within that tiny space is the equivalent of a brain. And that would explain how single cells can also differ in “domain-specific cognitive skills”.

We haven't see bacterial brains as yet with the finest of the newest technical methods but we can follow individual molecules as they work within systems, and we know whole bacteria or cells follow exact instructions for the processes or how they respond to stimuli, all from information in the complexity of the genomes that we are still unearthing. They simply look intelligent and that is all we know at the moment. domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Sunday, September 27, 2020, 12:44 (1301 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: their current brain complexity allows what they can do. Which translates into my view that what level of mental complexity occurs is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design. One can only work with what is given. We work with a brain given to us at least 315,000 years ago and its complexity allowed what has subsequently happened.

dhw: I agree that the brain’s complexity, neuron numbers and networks allow what any of us can DO and determine what we can work with. The great question is whether they allow what any of us can THINK, and surprisingly you argue that they are the base which determines the level of mental complexity. “Surprisingly” because this clashes with the dualism you always claim to espouse. '''perhaps we can shorten it with a simple question: do you believe the thoughts of your dualist’s soul are restricted by the numbers of neurons and their networks?

DAVID: Why ask again: I've always said the soul can only work with the brain it is given, complexity of concept limited by brain complexity. My dualism has not changed.

We agree that the soul can only work with the brain it is given. But that should not stop the soul from using the information provided by the brain to think of new concepts. And yet you say that the “level of MENTAL complexity (i.e. non-material thought) is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design” (i.e. the material brain). As I understand it, dualism entails the soul doing the thinking and the brain providing the information and implementing the thought. This is what I believe you agreed in the past.

DAVID: Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

dhw: And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

DAVID: Your usual backwards approach. All of evolution was designed by God to eventually reach the goal of humans.

You keep repeating this, and I keep asking why an all-powerful God with only one purpose (H. sapiens) directly designed millions of now extinct non-human life forms, natural wonders etc. before even starting on directly designing all the different stages that led to the only life form (plus food supply) that he wanted to design. Back to “Back to David’s Theory…” Once again: how does the fact that bacteria morphed into apes, dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus prove that they were all “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

QUOTE: "With our study we show that cognitive abilities cannot be generalized, but that species instead differ in domain-specific cognitive skills…"

dhw: The bold is an important observation in the context of my speculations about evolution and intelligence. Firstly, there are different types of intelligence, and the fact that ants, for instance, only have tiny brains does not mean they do not have the intelligence to work out their own strategies for survival. But I would go even further. Bacteria and other single cells don’t have brains at all, but as you know, I propose that they do have intelligence, i.e. that somewhere within that tiny space is the equivalent of a brain. And that would explain how single cells can also differ in “domain-specific cognitive skills”.

DAVID: We haven't seen bacterial brains as yet with the finest of the newest technical methods but we can follow individual molecules as they work within systems, and we know whole bacteria or cells follow exact instructions for the processes or how they respond to stimuli, all from information in the complexity of the genomes that we are still unearthing. They simply look intelligent and that is all we know at the moment.

We don’t “know” that bacteria or cells follow exact instructions from your God. We know that they perform all kinds of actions successfully, and it is impossible not to believe that these result from some form of intelligence. You claim the intelligence is in the form of instructions from God, and I propose that they work out solutions for themselves, and whatever mechanism it is that enables them to “think” passes instructions to the rest of the cell.

DAVID: domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Sunday, September 27, 2020, 17:00 (1301 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: Why ask again: I've always said the soul can only work with the brain it is given, complexity of concept limited by brain complexity. My dualism has not changed.

dhw: We agree that the soul can only work with the brain it is given. But that should not stop the soul from using the information provided by the brain to think of new concepts. And yet you say that the “level of MENTAL complexity (i.e. non-material thought) is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design” (i.e. the material brain). As I understand it, dualism entails the soul doing the thinking and the brain providing the information and implementing the thought. This is what I believe you agreed in the past.

The key is implementation, as provided by the available complexity of the neuronal networks which allow the breadth of new thought by the soul


DAVID: Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

dhw: And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

DAVID: Your usual backwards approach. All of evolution was designed by God to eventually reach the goal of humans.

dhw: You keep repeating this, and I keep asking why an all-powerful God with only one purpose (H. sapiens) directly designed millions of now extinct non-human life forms, natural wonders etc. before even starting on directly designing all the different stages that led to the only life form (plus food supply) that he wanted to design. Back to “Back to David’s Theory…” Once again: how does the fact that bacteria morphed into apes, dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus prove that they were all “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

Because that is what history of evolution shows us. God creates history.


QUOTE: "With our study we show that cognitive abilities cannot be generalized, but that species instead differ in domain-specific cognitive skills…"

dhw: The bold is an important observation in the context of my speculations about evolution and intelligence. Firstly, there are different types of intelligence, and the fact that ants, for instance, only have tiny brains does not mean they do not have the intelligence to work out their own strategies for survival. But I would go even further. Bacteria and other single cells don’t have brains at all, but as you know, I propose that they do have intelligence, i.e. that somewhere within that tiny space is the equivalent of a brain. And that would explain how single cells can also differ in “domain-specific cognitive skills”.

DAVID: We haven't seen bacterial brains as yet with the finest of the newest technical methods but we can follow individual molecules as they work within systems, and we know whole bacteria or cells follow exact instructions for the processes or how they respond to stimuli, all from information in the complexity of the genomes that we are still unearthing. They simply look intelligent and that is all we know at the moment.

dhw: We don’t “know” that bacteria or cells follow exact instructions from your God. We know that they perform all kinds of actions successfully, and it is impossible not to believe that these result from some form of intelligence. You claim the intelligence is in the form of instructions from God, and I propose that they work out solutions for themselves, and whatever mechanism it is that enables them to “think” passes instructions to the rest of the cell.

It is perfectly possible to believe, as I do, that cells follow explicit intelligent instructions implanted by/from God.


DAVID: domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

dhw: My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

It does play a role. I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Monday, September 28, 2020, 14:14 (1300 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: […] you say that the “level of MENTAL complexity (i.e. non-material thought) is based on the number of neurons and their networks complex design” (i.e. the material brain). As I understand it, dualism entails the soul doing the thinking and the brain providing the information and implementing the thought. This is what I believe you agreed in the past.

DAVID: The key is implementation, as provided by the available complexity of the neuronal networks which allow the breadth of new thought by the soul.

You are reverting to your old fudge. We are talking about the functions of the dualist’s soul and brain. 1) The soul does the thinking. 2) The brain provides information and implements thought. Simple question for you: is the dualist’s soul capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the brain?

DAVID: Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

dhw: And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

DAVID: Because that is what history of evolution shows us. God creates history.

Yes, if God exists, he has created history. I’ll leave out apes and living species to prevent any digressions here. The history of evolution shows us that dinosaurs and the dodo existed. Now please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.

QUOTE: "With our study we show that cognitive abilities cannot be generalized, but that species instead differ in domain-specific cognitive skills…"

dhw: The bold is an important observation in the context of my speculations about evolution and intelligence. Firstly, there are different types of intelligence, and the fact that ants, for instance, only have tiny brains does not mean they do not have the intelligence to work out their own strategies for survival. But I would go even further. Bacteria and other single cells don’t have brains at all, but as you know, I propose that they do have intelligence, i.e. that somewhere within that tiny space is the equivalent of a brain. And that would explain how single cells can also differ in “domain-specific cognitive skills”.

DAVID: We haven't seen bacterial brains as yet with the finest of the newest technical methods but we can follow individual molecules as they work within systems, and bbwe know whole bacteria or cells follow exact instructions bb for the processes or how they respond to stimuli, all from information in the complexity of the genomes that we are still unearthing. They simply look intelligent and that is all we know at the moment.

dhw: We don’t “know” that bacteria or cells follow exact instructions from your God. We know that they perform all kinds of actions successfully, and it is impossible not to believe that these result from some form of intelligence. You claim the intelligence is in the form of instructions from God, and I propose that they work out solutions for themselves, and whatever mechanism it is that enables them to “think” passes instructions to the rest of the cell.

DAVID: It is perfectly possible to believe, as I do, that cells follow explicit intelligent instructions implanted by/from God.

Of course it’s possible to believe it, but please don’t claim that we “know” it.

DAVID: ...domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

dhw: My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

DAVID: It does play a role. I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

Yes, you have fixed and rigid beliefs as regards the nature, purpose and methods of your God. And yet you frequently remind us that we can’t “know” how God thinks. All the alternative explanations of evolution that I offer are possible versions of your God’s nature, purpose and methods. And you agree that they are all logical. Absolutely nothing to do with my agnosticism. An agnostic is just as free to speculate on these matters as a theist, and in any case I very much doubt that all theists share your views on the nature, purpose and methods of their God.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Monday, September 28, 2020, 17:56 (1300 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: The key is implementation, as provided by the available complexity of the neuronal networks which allow the breadth of new thought by the soul.

dhw: You are reverting to your old fudge. We are talking about the functions of the dualist’s soul and brain. 1) The soul does the thinking. 2) The brain provides information and implements thought. Simple question for you: is the dualist’s soul capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the brain?

My dualist theory, not fudge. The soul must use the brain it is given to think, and does receive information from that brain, where you limit your theory.


DAVID: Apes survived just fine without morphing into our big brains.

dhw: And bacteria survived just fine without morphing into apes and dinosaurs and the duck-billed platypus. How does that prove that every organism that ever lived was “part of the goal of evolving humans”?

DAVID: Because that is what history of evolution shows us. God creates history.

dhw: Yes, if God exists, he has created history. I’ll leave out apes and living species to prevent any digressions here. The history of evolution shows us that dinosaurs and the dodo existed. Now please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.

(a) God creates history; (b) humans arrived as the unexpected endpoint (Adler); (c) God chose to evolve us for those of us who believe in God.


dhw: We don’t “know” that bacteria or cells follow exact instructions from your God. We know that they perform all kinds of actions successfully, and it is impossible not to believe that these result from some form of intelligence. You claim the intelligence is in the form of instructions from God, and I propose that they work out solutions for themselves, and whatever mechanism it is that enables them to “think” passes instructions to the rest of the cell.

DAVID: It is perfectly possible to believe, as I do, that cells follow explicit intelligent instructions implanted by/from God.

dhw: Of course it’s possible to believe it, but please don’t claim that we “know” it.

I didn't write that above.


DAVID: ...domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

dhw: My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

DAVID: It does play a role. I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

dhw: Yes, you have fixed and rigid beliefs as regards the nature, purpose and methods of your God. And yet you frequently remind us that we can’t “know” how God thinks. All the alternative explanations of evolution that I offer are possible versions of your God’s nature, purpose and methods. And you agree that they are all logical. Absolutely nothing to do with my agnosticism. An agnostic is just as free to speculate on these matters as a theist, and in any case I very much doubt that all theists share your views on the nature, purpose and methods of their God.

I am my own theist. I follow my reasoning as influenced by some authors. The bold is not my thinking. God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Tuesday, September 29, 2020, 14:18 (1299 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: The key is implementation, as provided by the available complexity of the neuronal networks which allow the breadth of new thought by the soul.

dhw: You are reverting to your old fudge. We are talking about the functions of the dualist’s soul and brain. 1) The soul does the thinking. 2) The brain provides information and implements thought. Simple question for you: is the dualist’s soul capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the brain?

DAVID: My dualist theory, not fudge. The soul must use the brain it is given to think, and does receive information from that brain, where you limit your theory.

No, my theory goes on to propose that the modern brain implements the new thoughts/ideas by complexifying and in the case of the hippocampus, expanding (adding new cells). You know the rest. Meanwhile, my simple question bolded above can be answered by a yes or a no.

dhw: [..] please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.

DAVID:(a) God creates history; (b) humans arrived as the unexpected endpoint (Adler); (c)
God chose to evolve us for those of us who believe in God.

If God exists, I agree with (a), (b) I agree that humans arrived. Who didn’t expect humans? “Endpoint” means the conclusion, and humans may be the conclusion in the sense that there will never be a more complex product. It certainly doesn’t mean that evolution is finished, and it doesn’t explain why your all-powerful God designed dinosaurs and dodos if all he wanted to design was H. sapiens. This is the problem you always dodge. (c) Those of you who believe in God must also believe that he chose to evolve the dinosaur and the dodo. They do not have to believe that evolution is synonymous with direct design, as in preprogramming and/or dabbling. These are the things that history does not show!

DAVID: It is perfectly possible to believe, as I do, that cells follow explicit intelligent instructions implanted by/from God.

dhw: Of course it’s possible to believe it, but please don’t claim that we “know” it.

DAVID: I didn't write that above.

You wrote: “we know whole bacteria or cells follow exact instructions for the processes or how they respond to stimuli….”

DAVID: ...domain-specific cognitive skills are just that for cells and whole organisms as we observe. It does not mean they use their own innate intelligence or are subject to intelligent information instructions. I believe the latter and you the former. That will not change as long as you remain agnostic.

dhw: My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

DAVID: It does play a role. I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

dhw: Yes, you have fixed and rigid beliefs as regards the nature, purpose and methods of your God. And yet you frequently remind us that we can’t “know” how God thinks. All the alternative explanations of evolution that I offer are possible versions of your God’s nature, purpose and methods. And you agree that they are all logical. Absolutely nothing to do with my agnosticism. An agnostic is just as free to speculate on these matters as a theist, and in any case I very much doubt that all theists share your views on the nature, purpose and methods of their God.

DAVID: I am my own theist. I follow my reasoning as influenced by some authors. The bold is not my thinking. God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

You tried to dismiss my criticism of your illogicality and all my alternative theories on the grounds that I am an agnostic. An agnostic can guess just as well as a theist! The illogicality of your approach is all too clear from this latest comment of yours. How can you possibly know that God thinks as we do if you cannot follow his reasoning? You make guesses and I make guesses, and you acknowledge that all of mine are logical but you “deal in absolutes” and I deal in “possibilities”. Since we cannot know his reasoning and can only guess, how can we deal in absolutes and not in possibilities?

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 29, 2020, 17:19 (1299 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: You are reverting to your old fudge. We are talking about the functions of the dualist’s soul and brain. 1) The soul does the thinking. 2) The brain provides information and implements thought. Simple question for you: is the dualist’s soul capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the brain?

DAVID: My dualist theory, not fudge. The soul must use the brain it is given to think, and does receive information from that brain, where you limit your theory.

dhw: No, my theory goes on to propose that the modern brain implements the new thoughts/ideas by complexifying and in the case of the hippocampus, expanding (adding new cells). You know the rest. Meanwhile, my simple question bolded above can be answered by a yes or a no.

There is no yes or no answer since you avoid my point that the soul must think with the brain it is given, as stated above, a major difference in approach.


dhw: [..] please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.

DAVID:(a) God creates history; (b) humans arrived as the unexpected endpoint (Adler); (c)
God chose to evolve us for those of us who believe in God.

dhw:If God exists, I agree with (a), (b) I agree that humans arrived. Who didn’t expect humans? “Endpoint” means the conclusion, and humans may be the conclusion in the sense that there will never be a more complex product. It certainly doesn’t mean that evolution is finished, and it doesn’t explain why your all-powerful God designed dinosaurs and dodos if all he wanted to design was H. sapiens. This is the problem you always dodge. (c) Those of you who believe in God must also believe that he chose to evolve the dinosaur and the dodo. They do not have to believe that evolution is synonymous with direct design, as in preprogramming and/or dabbling. These are the things that history does not show!

I assume God, as creator, formed history. Therefore I don't dodge. You refuse accept it.


dhw: My agnosticism is totally irrelevant, and I wish you wouldn’t keep using it as your escape route. It is perfectly possible to believe in a God who endowed cells with intelligence.

DAVID: It does play a role. I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

dhw: Yes, you have fixed and rigid beliefs as regards the nature, purpose and methods of your God. And yet you frequently remind us that we can’t “know” how God thinks. All the alternative explanations of evolution that I offer are possible versions of your God’s nature, purpose and methods. And you agree that they are all logical. Absolutely nothing to do with my agnosticism. An agnostic is just as free to speculate on these matters as a theist, and in any case I very much doubt that all theists share your views on the nature, purpose and methods of their God.

DAVID: I am my own theist. I follow my reasoning as influenced by some authors. The bold is not my thinking. God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

dhw: You tried to dismiss my criticism of your illogicality and all my alternative theories on the grounds that I am an agnostic. An agnostic can guess just as well as a theist! The illogicality of your approach is all too clear from this latest comment of yours. How can you possibly know that God thinks as we do if you cannot follow his reasoning?

Preposterous. How can I know his reasons? I know your reasoning because you have explained it. Reasoning is individual to each person. Methods of thought can be similar.

dhw: You make guesses and I make guesses, and you acknowledge that all of mine are logical but you “deal in absolutes” and I deal in “possibilities”. Since we cannot know his reasoning and can only guess, how can we deal in absolutes and not in possibilities?

I reach definite opinions. Your's are in all directions of possibilities.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Wednesday, September 30, 2020, 10:59 (1298 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: We are talking about the functions of the dualist’s soul and brain. 1) The soul does the thinking. 2) The brain provides information and implements thought. Simple question for you: is the dualist’s soul capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the brain?

DAVID: My dualist theory, not fudge. The soul must use the brain it is given to think, and does receive information from that brain, where you limit your theory.

dhw: No, my theory goes on to propose that the modern brain implements the new thoughts/ideas by complexifying and in the case of the hippocampus, expanding (adding new cells). You know the rest. Meanwhile, my simple question bolded above can be answered by a yes or a no.

DAVID: There is no yes or no answer since you avoid my point that the soul must think with the brain it is given, as stated above, a major difference in approach.

The two points are unrelated. Yes, I agree that the soul must think with the brain it is given, i.e. it uses the brain to gather the information it thinks about, and to implement its thoughts. Now please tell me whether you think the soul is capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the existing brain.

dhw: [..] please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.[…]

DAVID: I assume God, as creator, formed history. Therefore I don't dodge. You refuse accept it.

I also assume that if God exists he formed history. But the only history we know is the great bush of life. Why and how God produced it is not history but interpretation. If you don’t dodge, then please tell us why your all-powerful God directly designed the dinosaur and the dodo although his only purpose was to design H. sapiens plus food supply.

DAVID: I deal in absolutes from the evidence and you in possibilities, a vastly different approach.

dhw: Yes, you have fixed and rigid beliefs as regards the nature, purpose and methods of your God. And yet you frequently remind us that we can’t “know” how God thinks. All the alternative explanations of evolution that I offer are possible versions of your God’s nature, purpose and methods. And you agree that they are all logical. […]

DAVID: […] The bold is not my thinking. God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

dhw: […] The illogicality of your approach is all too clear from this latest comment of yours. How can you possibly know that God thinks as we do if you cannot follow his reasoning?

DAVID: Preposterous. How can I know his reasons? I know your reasoning because you have explained it. Reasoning is individual to each person. Methods of thought can be similar.

You can’t know his reasons, can only guess at them, and yet you know he “thinks as we do”. That is what is “preposterous”, especially when you attribute to him reasons which you yourself can’t understand, e.g. his reason for designing dinosaurs and dodos was that they were necessary for him to be able to design H. sapiens (see the “errors” thread).

dhw: You make guesses and I make guesses, and you acknowledge that all of mine are logical but you “deal in absolutes” and I deal in “possibilities”. Since we cannot know his reasoning and can only guess, how can we deal in absolutes and not in possibilities?

DAVID: I reach definite opinions. Your's are in all directions of possibilities.

Correct. You admit that we cannot know your God’s reasons, but you have a definite opinion that his reason for creating life was to produce H. sapiens plus food supply, and that his reason for directly designing every other species that preceded H. sapiens was that they were “part of the goal of evolving humans”. You also have a definite opinion that any alternative to these guesses about his reasons – even if it is completely logical – is not how God thinks. You know how God thinks, although you don't know his reasoning.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 30, 2020, 15:48 (1298 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: No, my theory goes on to propose that the modern brain implements the new thoughts/ideas by complexifying and in the case of the hippocampus, expanding (adding new cells). You know the rest. Meanwhile, my simple question bolded above can be answered by a yes or a no.

DAVID: There is no yes or no answer since you avoid my point that the soul must think with the brain it is given, as stated above, a major difference in approach.

dhw: The two points are unrelated. Yes, I agree that the soul must think with the brain it is given, i.e. it uses the brain to gather the information it thinks about, and to implement its thoughts. Now please tell me whether you think the soul is capable of thinking new thoughts, using the information provided by the existing brain.

Again not my nuance of theory: I strongly feel in my view of dualism, the soul must use the brain networks to create thought and is the driver of the creation. Of course in that process it uses information provided by the brain either sensory or from memory. How do you define 'information'?


dhw: [..] please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.[…]

DAVID: I assume God, as creator, formed history. Therefore I don't dodge. You refuse accept it.

dhw: I also assume that if God exists he formed history. But the only history we know is the great bush of life. Why and how God produced it is not history but interpretation. If you don’t dodge, then please tell us why your all-powerful God directly designed the dinosaur and the dodo although his only purpose was to design H. sapiens plus food supply.

Round and round. That God chose to evolve us from bacteria is no dodge. Each stage purposeful


DAVID: […] The bold is not my thinking. God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

dhw: […] The illogicality of your approach is all too clear from this latest comment of yours. How can you possibly know that God thinks as we do if you cannot follow his reasoning?

DAVID: Preposterous. How can I know his reasons? I know your reasoning because you have explained it. Reasoning is individual to each person. Methods of thought can be similar.

dhw: You can’t know his reasons, can only guess at them, and yet you know he “thinks as we do”. That is what is “preposterous”, especially when you attribute to him reasons which you yourself can’t understand, e.g. his reason for designing dinosaurs and dodos was that they were necessary for him to be able to design H. sapiens (see the “errors” thread).

Choosing to evolve us requires exactly what you question. Thinking with a mind is teh saem for all who can think, including God.


dhw: You make guesses and I make guesses, and you acknowledge that all of mine are logical but you “deal in absolutes” and I deal in “possibilities”. Since we cannot know his reasoning and can only guess, how can we deal in absolutes and not in possibilities?

DAVID: I reach definite opinions. Yours are in all directions of possibilities.

dhw: Correct. You admit that we cannot know your God’s reasons, but you have a definite opinion that his reason for creating life was to produce H. sapiens plus food supply, and that his reason for directly designing every other species that preceded H. sapiens was that they were “part of the goal of evolving humans”. You also have a definite opinion that any alternative to these guesses about his reasons – even if it is completely logical – is not how God thinks. You know how God thinks, although you don't know his reasoning.

No one can know God's exact thoughts. We both interpret the results of God's actions very differently.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Thursday, October 01, 2020, 11:30 (1297 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: [..] please tell us how the history shows that (a) your God directly designed them all, and (b) that his sole purpose in designing them was to design H. sapiens, and (c) why God could not have designed H. sapiens without designing dinosaurs and dodos first.[…]

DAVID: I assume God, as creator, formed history. Therefore I don't dodge. You refuse accept it.

dhw: I also assume that if God exists he formed history. But the only history we know is the great bush of life. Why and how God produced it is not history but interpretation. If you don’t dodge, then please tell us why your all-powerful God directly designed the dinosaur and the dodo although his only purpose was to design H. sapiens plus food supply.

DAVID: Round and round. That God chose to evolve us from bacteria is no dodge. Each stage purposeful.

Please tell us in what way your God’s design of the dinosaur and the dodo (plus a few million other dead life forms) provided a stage in the design of H. sapiens.

DAVID: […] God thinks as we do. His reasoning is guided by His precise purposes. His choice of creation methods follows his reasoning which we cannot know but about which can make guesses.

dhw: […] The illogicality of your approach is all too clear from this latest comment of yours. How can you possibly know that God thinks as we do if you cannot follow his reasoning?

DAVID: Choosing to evolve us requires exactly what you question. Thinking with a mind is teh saem for all who can think, including God.

Ah, so when you say he thinks as we do, all you mean is that he has got a mind. Got it! Unfortunately, that doesn’t help us to find a reason why he would directly design the dinosaur and the dodo when all he wanted to design was us.

dhw: You make guesses and I make guesses, and you acknowledge that all of mine are logical but you “deal in absolutes” and I deal in “possibilities”. Since we cannot know his reasoning and can only guess, how can we deal in absolutes and not in possibilities?

DAVID: I reach definite opinions. Yours are in all directions of possibilities.

dhw: Correct. You admit that we cannot know your God’s reasons, but you have a definite opinion and deal in absolutes. […] You know how God thinks, although you don't know his reasoning.

DAVID: No one can know God's exact thoughts. We both interpret the results of God's actions very differently.

But you reach definite decisions and talk of absolutes, even though you can’t find ANY logical reasons why he would have applied your choice of his method to fulfil your choice of his purpose. Furthermore, you reject my alternative possibilities, even though you can understand their logic. I know of atheists whose approach to these subjects is very similar to yours. They reach a definite decision concerning God’s existence and refuse to listen to your cogent and logical arguments- for design. Can you think of a word that describes this approach?

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 01, 2020, 16:48 (1297 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: Round and round. That God chose to evolve us from bacteria is no dodge. Each stage purposeful.

dhw: Please tell us in what way your God’s design of the dinosaur and the dodo (plus a few million other dead life forms) provided a stage in the design of H. sapiens.

Silly question. That is the way evolution works.


DAVID: Choosing to evolve us requires exactly what you question. Thinking with a mind is the same for all who can think, including God.

dhw: Ah, so when you say he thinks as we do, all you mean is that he has got a mind. Got it! Unfortunately, that doesn’t help us to find a reason why he would directly design the dinosaur and the dodo when all he wanted to design was us.

He wanted to design all of evolution, as history shows with humans as the endpoint. He understood the whole bush of life is necessary as a food supply for all. Especially with the ever rising size of the human population.


DAVID: No one can know God's exact thoughts. We both interpret the results of God's actions very differently.

dhw: But you reach definite decisions and talk of absolutes, even though you can’t find ANY logical reasons why he would have applied your choice of his method to fulfil your choice of his purpose. Furthermore, you reject my alternative possibilities, even though you can understand their logic. I know of atheists whose approach to these subjects is very similar to yours. They reach a definite decision concerning God’s existence and refuse to listen to your cogent and logical arguments- for design. Can you think of a word that describes this approach?

We both know no one can read the mind of God. Since He is capable of direct creation of the universe with the Big Bang, it seems He could have created humans directly, but we know He didn't. The food supply is one major reason why not. You rigidly can't make a choice when choices are obvious, and I rigidly stick to my choices all based on reasonable evidence. There is your word.

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by dhw, Friday, October 02, 2020, 12:26 (1296 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Round and round. That God chose to evolve us from bacteria is no dodge. Each stage purposeful.

dhw: Please tell us in what way your God’s design of the dinosaur and the dodo (plus a few million other dead life forms) provided a stage in the design of H. sapiens.

DAVID: Silly question. That is the way evolution works.

Silly answer. You insist that your God designed every species, and that every dead life form was “part of the goal of evolving humans”. How was designing the dinosaurs and the dodo part of the goal of designing humans?

DAVID: Choosing to evolve us requires exactly what you question. Thinking with a mind is the same for all who can think, including God.

dhw: Ah, so when you say he thinks as we do, all you mean is that he has got a mind. Got it! Unfortunately, that doesn’t help us to find a reason why he would directly design the dinosaur and the dodo when all he wanted to design was us.

DAVID: He wanted to design all of evolution, as history shows with humans as the endpoint. He understood the whole bush of life is necessary as a food supply for all. Especially with the ever rising size of the human population.

Why were 3.X billion years’ worth of food supplies for millions of now extinct organisms necessary in order to feed humans who had not yet appeared on the planet?

DAVID: No one can know God's exact thoughts. We both interpret the results of God's actions very differently.

dhw: But you reach definite decisions and talk of absolutes, even though you can’t find ANY logical reasons why he would have applied your choice of his method to fulfil your choice of his purpose. Furthermore, you reject my alternative possibilities, even though you can understand their logic. I know of atheists whose approach to these subjects is very similar to yours. They reach a definite decision concerning God’s existence and refuse to listen to your cogent and logical arguments- for design. Can you think of a word that describes this
approach?
{Sadly you didn’t come up with one!]

DAVID: We both know no one can read the mind of God. Since He is capable of direct creation of the universe with the Big Bang, it seems He could have created humans directly, but we know He didn't.

And that is your problem. It is not unreasonable to assume that your God, if he exists, did what he WANTED to do. He didn’t directly create humans. So maybe he DID want to create humans, but didn’t know how to do it. Or maybe when he started the process of evolution, it was NOT because he wanted to create humans – but maybe he WANTED to create an ever changing bush of life.

DAVID (transferred from the “error” thread): Your thinking finally understands my theory. Of course He wanted all of the evolutionary stages on the way to humans, which are His final goal. The lack of understanding all these years shows your basic bias from the beginning. Your statement that He only wanted humans was your rigid misinterpretation of my thoughts all along.

But I keep asking you how the dodo and the dinosaur plus millions of extinct life forms can be called stages on the way to humans, in the sense that they were all “part of the goal of evolving humans”. You have consistently argued that your God’s purpose in creating life was to create H. sapiens. Sometimes you dilute this to “prime purpose” or “a goal” instead of “the” goal, and when asked what other goals there might be, you come up with none. I am proposing that the ever-changing great bush of life is what your God WANTED. And although I also propose that the bush is the result of him not wanting a predictable show (hence organisms having a free rein), your own belief that he specially designed every extinct non-human organism renders your anthropocentric theory even less likely.

DAVID: You rigidly can't make a choice when choices are obvious, and I rigidly stick to my choices all based on reasonable evidence. There is your word.

There is no “obvious” theistic choice, because as you rightly say, nobody can read your God’s mind. You rigidly stick to your one choice, and can't find any reason for it except that all the extinct life forms were necessary to feed humans who didn’t yet exist. “Reasonable evidence”?

Clever Corvids: the cortical equivalent in many birds

by David Turell @, Friday, October 02, 2020, 19:40 (1295 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: He wanted to design all of evolution, as history shows with humans as the endpoint. He understood the whole bush of life is necessary as a food supply for all. Especially with the ever rising size of the human population.

dhw: Why were 3.X billion years’ worth of food supplies for millions of now extinct organisms necessary in order to feed humans who had not yet appeared on the planet?

Now you propose God can't foresee the future?

DAVID: We both know no one can read the mind of God. Since He is capable of direct creation of the universe with the Big Bang, it seems He could have created humans directly, but we know He didn't.

dhw: And that is your problem. It is not unreasonable to assume that your God, if he exists, did what he WANTED to do. He didn’t directly create humans. So maybe he DID want to create humans, but didn’t know how to do it. Or maybe when he started the process of evolution, it was NOT because he wanted to create humans – but maybe he WANTED to create an ever changing bush of life.

You returned to your same mamby-pamby, experimenting with no future goal God.


DAVID (transferred from the “error” thread): Your thinking finally understands my theory. Of course He wanted all of the evolutionary stages on the way to humans, which are His final goal. The lack of understanding all these years shows your basic bias from the beginning. Your statement that He only wanted humans was your rigid misinterpretation of my thoughts all along.

dhw: But I keep asking you how the dodo and the dinosaur plus millions of extinct life forms can be called stages on the way to humans, in the sense that they were all “part of the goal of evolving humans”. You have consistently argued that your God’s purpose in creating life was to create H. sapiens. Sometimes you dilute this to “prime purpose” or “a goal” instead of “the” goal, and when asked what other goals there might be, you come up with none. I am proposing that the ever-changing great bush of life is what your God WANTED. And although I also propose that the bush is the result of him not wanting a predictable show (hence organisms having a free rein), your own belief that he specially designed every extinct non-human organism renders your anthropocentric theory even less likely.

You are still actively trying to twist an interpret action of my thoughts about God as an excuse for years of your confusion. I answered all your questions over and over in the same tone and fact. Evolving through all the stages of evolution, as history presents, to an accepted goal is a simple concept. That is all I have ever tried to present. Your so-called alternate goals interpret a God with a personality I do not accept. I'm still with Adler's interpretation.


DAVID: You rigidly can't make a choice when choices are obvious, and I rigidly stick to my choices all based on reasonable evidence. There is your word.

dhw: There is no “obvious” theistic choice, because as you rightly say, nobody can read your God’s mind. You rigidly stick to your one choice, and can't find any reason for it except that all the extinct life forms were necessary to feed humans who didn’t yet exist. “Reasonable evidence”?

There is a constellation of many facts covered in both my books which help describe God's actions and his probably purposeful personality. The bold is pure nonsense. Extinct life plays no role in current time. The huge bush of life is in present time for our huge population to use now. My God plans for future needs. You mind isn't following the continuity of His purposes. Again your bias, in my view.

Clever Corvids: now New Zealand robins show memory

by David Turell @, Wednesday, February 19, 2020, 18:22 (1521 days ago) @ David Turell

All animals with a brain and some even without can be trained. These robins show training memory over a period of time:

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/wild-birds-remember-a-novel-task-for-nearly-...

"New Zealand’s North Island robins (Petroica longipes), known as toutouwai in Maori, are capable of remembering a foraging task taught to them by researchers for up to 22 months in the wild, according to a study published on February 12 in Biology Letters. These results echo the findings of a number of laboratory studies of long-term memory in animals, but offer a rare example of a wild animal retaining a learned behavior with no additional training.

***

"In the new study, Shaw and her coauthor, Annette Harvey, tested 32 of the initial 64 birds that were trained in 2015 and 2016 and banded for individual identification, 30 of which performed the memory task by spontaneously pecking the lids and opening them on their first try. None of the trained birds had seen the box between the initial training and retesting, though some of the untrained control birds had encountered the apparatus in a previous research project. The time between when the birds had first learned the lid-opening behavior and subsequent testing ranged from 10 to 22 months. By contrast, the 17 untrained birds were unable to complete the task.

"According to Shaw, the two outliers that didn’t remember the task may have been exceptions to the rule. One of the trained birds was a female that had taken the longest to initially learn the task, and whose dominant male partner interfered with testing. The other bird was old and unwell, and disappeared a few weeks after the experiment.

"While Shaw was impressed by her subjects’ performance, Pravosudov says, “I’ve been studying these questions for a long time. It’s not surprising.” Nevertheless, he adds, “it’s good to have more evidence accumulated that the animals are capable of this.” For instance, he cites lab studies that have shown pigeons’ ability to remember and identify photographs and drawings for more than 730 days, and tortoises’ ability to retain an operant conditioning task for nine years. Lab research on Clark’s nutcrackers and chickadees has also found that the birds can remember the locations of hundreds of seeds for six months or more.

“'All animals have some basic memories,” he says, “and we may underappreciate how good . . . even [basic] memory is.'”

Comment: It appears all animal brains have the capacity of memory. It is an important way to remember where fresh food or stored food. All animals must have energy to eat to survive.

Clever Corvids: as smart as apes

by David Turell @, Thursday, December 10, 2020, 22:31 (1226 days ago) @ David Turell

A new study with ravens:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/young-ravens-rival-adult-chimps-in-a-big-tes...

"Scientists and casual observers alike have known for years that ravens and their corvid relatives are extremely smart. But most studies use single experiments that provide a limited view of their overall intelligence. “Quite often, in single tasks, you’re just testing whether the bird can understand that you’re hiding something,” says Simone Pika, a cognitive scientist at Osnabrück University in Germany.

"A new study that that tries to address that deficit provides some of the best proof yet that ravens, including young birds of just four months of age, have certain types of smarts that are on par with those of adult great apes. The brainy birds performed just as well as chimpanzees and orangutans across a broad array of tasks designed to measure intelligence. “We now have very strong evidence to say that, at least in the tasks we used, ravens are very similar to great apes,” says Pika, lead author of the study. “Across a whole spectrum of cognitive skills, their intelligence is really quite amazing.” The findings, published in Scientific Reports, add to a growing body of evidence indicating that impressive cognitive skills are not solely the domain of primates but occur in certain species across the animal kingdom."

Comment: No surprise based on previous studies.

Clever Corvids: other birds braininess

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 31, 2022, 17:50 (751 days ago) @ David Turell

Broken wing tactic:

https://phys.org/news/2022-03-broken-wing-tactic-widespread-thought.html

"A team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology and California Polytechnic State University, has found that the broken wing tactic used by some birds to lure predators away from their nest is more widespread than previously thought.

"Biologists have known about the broken wing tactic for more than 100 years, but its extent has never been thoroughly studied. What is known is that many members of bird species feign injury when predators approach their nest, hoping that they will be followed. Once they are a safe distance from the nest, the bird flies to safety.

"The work by the team involved searching for papers written about the broken wing tactic using Web of Science, Google Scholar and the Handbook of Birds of the World and building a database of findings. They carried out filtered requests that highlighted information about the tactic and found that it is more widespread than previously known—they found it in 52 bird families (and 13 orders) in nearly 300 species. They suggest this finding indicates that the tactic evolved independently multiple times.

"The researchers then looked for characteristics of the birds that use the tactic to see if they could spot commonalities. They found eight variables that they could associate with the broken wing tactic or feigning an injury. Most notably, they found that it was more common as species lived farther from the equator, suggesting that the behavior was related to shorter incubation periods. They also found it was more common in dense environments and where there was relatively little ground cover to hide the presence of a nest."

Comment: apparently an easily learned and copied tactic.

Clever Corvids: understanding probability

by David Turell @, Friday, July 07, 2023, 17:46 (288 days ago) @ David Turell

Latest study:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2381335-crows-can-understand-probability-like-prim...

"Crows can make decisions according to the likelihood of getting a reward – a cognitive feat known to mathematicians as statistical inference, and rarely found outside of primates.

***

"Her team trained two carrion crows (Corvus corone) to peck at nine, different-coloured symbols to receive a reward: a small food pellet or worms. Over hundreds of trials, they were taught that each symbol was associated with a different probability of receiving a reward, ranging from 10 to 100 per cent per peck. The crows were given the chance to choose between two options: for example, the green circle with a 90 per cent chance of receiving a reward versus the blue square with a 70 per cent chance. There were no wrong answers, just less optimal ones.

"Both crows pecked on the shapes with the highest probability of yielding them a reward more than seven times out of 10. In a second part of the experiment, shapes with lower probabilities were shown more often. While the crows could have pecked them more times and still gotten the same amount of reward, they still chose the shapes with the higher probability of getting them a treat.

“'They knew that even though it was shown less often it was more valuable,” says Johnston.

"This suggests the crows have the ability to use limited information about the probability of something happening and apply it in a new situation to maximise the possibility of getting a reward, she says.

"When tested a month later, the crows made decisions to peck the shapes with higher or lower probabilities at the same rate. “That’s pretty incredible,” says Johnston.

***

"Studies have suggested crows can grasp the concept of zero as a numerical quantity, something most human children don’t learn before around age 3.

"Rakoczy says that, prior to this, such complex numerical abilities were primarily known in primates. This not only highlights how brains can be very physiologically different and still carry out similarly complex reasoning, but also how the latter has cropped up independently in completely different branches of the evolutionary tree, he says."

Comment: more of the same. The crows' neurons are programmed to handle this.

Clever Corvids: more song calls more problem solving

by David Turell @, Friday, September 15, 2023, 15:17 (218 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by David Turell, Friday, September 15, 2023, 15:30

And bigger brains:

https://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/library/item/15_september_2023/4...

"Complex vocal learning, a critical component of human spoken language, has been assumed to be associated with more-advanced cognitive abilities. Tests of this hypothesis between individuals within a species have been inconclusive and have not been done across species. In this work, we measured an array of cognitive skills—namely, problem-solving, associative and reversal learning, and self-control—across 214 individuals of 23 bird species, including 19 wild-caught songbird species, two domesticated songbird species, and two wild-caught vocal nonlearning species. We found that the greater the vocal learning abilities of a species, the better their problem-solving skills and the relatively larger their brains. These conclusions held when controlling for noncognitive variables and phylogeny. Our results support a hypothesis of shared genetic and cognitive mechanisms between vocal learning, problem-solving, and bigger brains in songbirds.

***

"Spoken language and problem-solving are often considered to be components of intelligence in humans. An essential and specialized component of spoken language is vocal production learning, or the ability to imitate sounds. Advanced vocal learning has been found in only a handful of taxa, including five mammalian (humans, elephants, cetaceans, pinnipeds, and bats) and three avian (songbirds, parrots, and hummingbirds) clades. Interestingly, the vocal learning taxa that display the most complex vocal learning behavior overlap with those long thought to exhibit more-intelligent cognitive capacities [e.g., humans, cetaceans, elephants, corvid songbirds, and parrots], although this has not been quantitatively tested across species."

Comment: human brain evolution with enlargement and then the development of language suggests a parallel to the avian discoveries. More vocalizations carrying information require the presence of a larger, more complex brain. The evolutionary human pattern of a large, very complex brain before language development suggests the same pattern of evolution occurred in birds. This supports my view that speciation includes preparations for future important developments within species lifetime.

Other comments:

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGtxKLnKbBfRlHJWwRwwCBqScXw

"According to a new Science study, songbirds that can fluently imitate sounds they hear have bigger brains and better problem-solving abilities than their less tuneful peers.

"This ability to hear and then mimic complicated sounds, called complex vocal learning, is an important part of human spoken language acquisition that has only been observed in a handful of other species. Scientists have long assumed that it is associated with more advanced cognition. So to test this theory, researchers performed a series of behavioral tests on 214 birds from 23 different species. In one experiment, the birds were evaluated on their ability to remove a lid from a plastic container that held a tasty reward. In another, the birds needed to differentiate between lids of different colors to complete the task. The researchers found that species with more complex vocal learning abilities, such as the tufted titmouse, consistently aced the tests. The hapless mourning dove, meanwhile, was unable to perform the lid-opening task even after more than 50 attempts." (my bold)

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