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Originally posted by Barcs
My point was that intelligent guidance does not seem likely because of the great time involved in the evolution of life.
Intelligent guidance of evolution make no sense AT ALL because 99.99% of all species to ever exist have gone extinct. That doesn't sound intelligent to me at all .... Evolution has ups and downs. Some creatures go extinct because of bad random mutations.
Please explain the intelligence behind that. How does this intervention work? Are you saying that every time any creature is born a magical force goes into their genetics and alters exact DNA sequences for an exact purpose?
Sorry, but intelligence behind evolution is a pure guess and bears no relevance to reality.
The fact that so many creatures have gone extinct, shows there is likely no intelligent at all behind it. The fact that our higher intelligence could evolve within a short period (7 million years), shows that if there is any intelligence behind evolution they have the intellect of a 5 year old.
Originally posted by Barcs
Cars have absolutely nothing to do with species going extinct. It's a complete non sequitar to my argument. Cars took 3 billion years to emerge because HUMANS took 3 billion years to emerge and humans created them. If you consider them all part of the same process, then what exactly are you arguing with me about? Why did you bring up the car? We're talking about intelligent guidance of evolution are we not?
Cars have not been around long enough to see a major environmental catastrophe that would alter their rate and quality of production. Also there are many varieties of cars, some better quality then others, why arent all the cars of the same best quality, why did other species of cars suddenly stop improving? Evolution itself is the planning ahead, the fact the the universe is established as it is, and there is lots of energy and biology, and time must go forth, is insurance that interesting things will happen. Maybe its an experiment, maybe a universe of this kind, and biology of this kind has never existed before and so in this universe all the probabilities are tested, and on earth alone, we see many of the potential arrangements of atoms over time. Alter the necessary DNA, thats what evolution is doing, right now every specie that exists can actually live and survive over time because of the alterations of its ancestral alterations of dna.
Furthermore the car is almost the complete opposite of evolution. It was designed by humans for specific purposes and has improved from model to model, INTENTIONALLY. There are no ups and downs. Only ups. There was no time during the hundred years we've had automobiles, that they suddenly stopped improving or regressed back to the previous decade's technology. This happens all the time with evolution, with big environmental changes. If an intelligent force was guiding evolution why wouldn't they plan ahead for such events, instead of just letting thousands of species go extinct. Why guide genetic mutations to make millions of different species if the goal is to create intelligent life? Why not alter the necessary DNA to speed up the process.
On a related note, my neighbor's dog is getting old and starting to walk with a limp.
No. They are products of human intelligence. You are equivocating intelligence and consciousness, 2 very different things. That seems to be your primary method of debating. You compare things that aren't related and use vague terminology to insinuate that they are the same. You've done it with biological evolution and layman's evolution. You've done it with biological life and human technology. And now you've done it with consciousness and intelligence. I'm not trying to be mean or anything, but I have to call you out when I see such a poor regard for logical arguments.
Originally posted by PhotonEffect
Hi Barcs,
Would you mind clarifying your stance on intelligence? I ask because on at least a few occasions in your arguments you have proclaimed, to the point of demanding, that intelligence requires a brain, but then you seemingly waffled with your response to ImaFungi:
"Maybe not. There could be other ways to manifest the same type of neural network as the brain, without a biological brain."
So I'm curious - Does it or doesn't it require a brain in your view?
I also have to bring up the case for plant intelligence. By the very meaning and definition of intelligence, plants meet the criteria and then some. Yet they have no brain or neural networks to speak of.
Here are some interesting things plants do and you can tell me if any of these don't meet the requirement for intelligence in your view:
*Ability to communicate (with other plants and animals)
*Ability to protect against predators and warn other plants. Can summon other animals to ward off pests.
*Ability to recognize next of kin or stranger, and react accordingly, typically favoring kin
*As it relates to above point- capable of refined recognition of self and non-self, and are territorial in behavior.
*Ability to determine precisely how much food reserves will be needed to get through the night- which some scientists have likened to performing of math to do so
*Ability to store "memories" and "learn" from positive or negative experiences to adjust for future behavior
*Ability to sense magnetic fields, gravity and sunlight et al and being able to react accordingly
*They sleep
*As young budding flowers they've even been observed to "play" in a sense (scientists have no other way to describe it)
If you are claiming that evolution is intelligent then it should learn and apply skills. If this is the case it will learn from past designs and should primarily use all the beneficial traits in the majority of modern species. This is not the case, however. It's mixed and matched. Many species do go extinct because of bad mutations. It's not always about mass extinctions.
Are you suggesting that evolution is the cause for extinctions? Most mass extinction level events are external to evolution so I'm not sure what you mean when you say this. Do you mean that because evolution doesn't act quick enough to adapt species to sudden changes in environments this should be indicative for lack of intelligence some how?
I find it ironic that you've been arguing against being able to prove consciousness on a broader scale yet on numerous occasions you've attempted to drill your points home using the above bolded phrase. What reality are you referring to?
Again, I don't understand the relevance of what you're asserting when you use time values or extinction as a way to disprove intelligence. Would you mind clarifying?
Originally posted by Barcs
I would say yes. It does require a brain or similar system capable of thinking and processing information. But yes, something has to be there to think. Intelligence can't just exist by itself.
Plants do not think. They do not experience pain, emotions, or any of the 5 senses.
The big thing that defines intelligence is the ability to think, and plants do not have this. Adapting to and recognizing their environment is not the same as making decisions and learning from them as life goes on, They do not technically learn and apply skills.
Saying they are as sophisticated as animals is an exaggeration.
If you are claiming that evolution is intelligent then it should learn and apply skills. If this is the case it will learn from past designs and should primarily use all the beneficial traits in the majority of modern species. This is not the case, however. It's mixed and matched. Many species do go extinct because of bad mutations. It's not always about mass extinctions.
Evolution has never headed in a clear direction of improvement as would seem to be required of any "intelligence". THIS is what you see in a product of intelligence
It's funny that Fungi mentioned cars because it's about to prove my point. When you study the development of cars, you see a very consistent improvement over time.You don't have things randomly changing from generation to generation. You don't have them getting better, then worse, then better, then worse, then better. In fact, intelligent creation is pretty much the exact opposite of how evolution works.
Originally posted by Barcs
Most of what you listed are instincts.
Plants do not think. They do not experience pain, emotions, or any of the 5 senses.
Plants can see, smell, feel, and remember.
3. You say that plants have a sense of smell?
Sure. But to answer this we have to define for ourselves what “smell” is. When we smell something, we sense a volatile chemical that’s dissolved in the air, and then react in someway to this smell. The clearest example in plants is what happens during fruit ripening. You may have heard that if you put a ripe and an unripe fruit together in the same bag, the unripe one will ripen faster. This happens because the ripe one releases a ripening pheromone into the air, and the green fruit smells it and then starts ripening itself.
Being able to think is not the only thing that defines intelligence though. Problem solving can be considered to be done by thinking yet this is exactly what plants do, constantly. And yes, they do learn from previous positive or negative experiences which are stored as memories to direct future behaviors.
I guess you'll just have to take it up with Darwin then.
Evolution is the transformation of species into more capable forms of itself or into a new species all together.
Why should improvement necessarily be a requirement for intelligence?
Or that a brand new "random" model didn't ever just appear on the scene only to go away again (Neon)? The VW Beetle flourished, then went extinct, only to be reborn with an updated design that resembles the form of the original.
Originally posted by Barcs
reply to post by PhotonEffect
Equivocation, equivocation and more equivocation. I'm sorry but comparing root structures in plants to neural networks in brains is grasping for straws big time. It's not even remotely similar.
By performing complex supercomputer simulations of the universe and using a variety of other calculations, researchers have now proven that the causal network representing the large-scale structure of space and time in our accelerating universe is a graph that shows remarkable similarity to many complex networks such as the Internet, social, or even biological networks.
“The most frequent question that people may ask is whether the discovered asymptotic equivalence between complex networks and the universe could be a coincidence,” said Krioukov. “Of course it could be, but the probability of such a coincidence is extremely low. Coincidences in physics are extremely rare, and almost never happen. There is always an explanation, which may be not immediately obvious.”
Dr. Panagariya says that the morphological similarities of a walnut with brain, beans with kidney and banana and apple with other organs of the human body could not be mere coincidence, because “coincidences in physics are extremely rare and there is always an explanation which may not be instantly obvious”.
You are doing EXACTLY what I was talking about previously. You are judging something based on subjective appearance and equivocating them because they appear similar to you.
Similarities in pictures of things CAN INDEED be dismissed as coincidence. It's not even close to objective, and the deeper you analyze those systems, the more differences you find.
BTW most plants have ZERO neurons. I say most because obviously there are plant-like animals and animal-like plants out there so there are exceptions to almost every rule.
Oh man, look at those! There's no way you can simply dismiss that as coincidence! The moon MUST be made of cheese!
Sorry but that is not the same as smelling something. I'm honestly getting tired of people using metaphors for things and taking it literally. That is not a description of smelling something.
You can't problem solve without thinking! There's a difference between aiming at the sun when it gives you energy or using a defense mechanism that ensures survival, and having to solve a puzzle or figuring out how to solve an issue with your car.
Show me the scientific studies behind plants learning and memory storage. This is the 2nd time I'm asking.
Please direct me to Darwin's work where he claims that plants are just as sophisticated as animals. That's laughable. I shouldn't even need to break down the differences, they are obvious. How about raising and teaching offspring?
Today, plant biologists are proud to point out that Charles Darwin actively studied plant movements and that he contributed to the discovery of the plant hormone auxin, but his comparison of plant and animal behavior is often overlooked, viewed as a distraction, and has even been used to imply that Darwin discovered or endorsed a modern “neurobiological” metaphorical or a rationalist approach to plants biology. Darwin, however, was not a rationalist. He was an empiricist, and his books on plant physiology exemplify this tendency as well as, if not better than, any of his other biological works.
They often receive traits that are worse. I keep saying this but it keeps being ignored. Improvement is not required for evolution.
Originally posted by Barcs
Let me get motivated, browse through your sources, and I'll be back to give it a worthy response.