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To: js1138
...the existence of big-brained animals without language leads me to believe we are rare...

Interesting. On the other hand, the existence of all those birds that don't weave hanging baskets for their nests suggests that the oropendula of the Amazon basin is rare - the oropendula is the only bird that does that, as far as I know. Perhaps that behavior is as much a product of geology and catastrophe as biology, as you say.

Many species have some unique aspect about them, or some unique combination of features. Perhaps the only reason we find language and big brains significant is because that happens to be our unique combination of features. If an oropendula could opine about such things, he might very well think the same thing about his nests ;)


12 posted on 11/17/2003 1:01:24 PM PST by general_re (Me and my vortex, we got a real good thing....)
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To: general_re
You are beating me up for lapsing into g3 mode. My basic argument stems from the assumption that there is no inherent direction to evolution. Competition may select for big brains, but big brains don't automatically produce language. Life seems to work just fine without language, and we will hardly be missed if we exterminate ourselves.
14 posted on 11/17/2003 1:14:44 PM PST by js1138
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