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Author Topic:   Animal Intelligence and Evolution/Creation
Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5901 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 53 of 102 (185676)
02-15-2005 7:09 PM
Reply to: Message 35 by Aximili23
02-14-2005 1:25 PM


Ants are as ants do
Warning: Somewhat off-topic post follows.
I can't speak for dogs, but Argentine ants are taking over most of earth's landmasses as one allied society. What the article I posted doesn't elaborate (I learned this on the Discovery channel, I don't have a link) is that different argentine ant colonies cooperate rather than compete, and are able to recognize each other universally. Thus, two nearby colonies will cooperate to fight any enemy ant species. And if you take an Argentine ant in the US and take it to Australia, it would be recognized and accepted by the colonies that are there. Humans don't even come close to this kind of worldwide cooperation. I'd say that counts as overwhelmingly unique.
Although I agree with your overall point, the specifics are inaccurate. A fascinating article on the Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) is Tsutsui ND, Suarez AV, 2003, "The Colony Structure and Population Biology of Invasive Ants", Conservation Biology 17:48-58. I don't have a handy computer version, so I'll have to paraphrase their findings:
1. This species acts like most other ants in its native range with one small exception: each colony has two modes of "reproduction" (i.e., founding new colonies). In one, it uses the standard Hymenopteran method of a sole queen flying off to found a new colony with a few workers. In the other, the colony "buds" to a nearby area where either the resources or abiotic factors are amenable, using multiple queens and hundreds-thousands of workers.
2. Each of the "supercolonies" founded by the latter method are apparently genetically linked, to the point that the new colony is, as you noted, completely "at one" with the parent colony. The supercolony is territorially aggressive - including to conspecifics - but individual colonies within the supercolony are altruistic towards the parent colony and each other. However, these supercolonies are usually less than a few hundred meters across.
3. Introduced colonies of the ant have produced immense supercolonies of hundreds of kilometers in extent by the latter method. They remain, however, just as aggressive against conspecific colonies not budded from the main supercolony (IOW, possibly founded through secondary invasions) as they would be in their native range. These invasive supercolonies are highly aggressive against native species, unlike some of the "tolerant" behaviors observed by colonies in their native range.
The most interesting conclusion from the study is that it appears the size and aggressiveness of the newly invasive supercolonies is something of a social evolution, rather than a genetic one. Population genetic studies reported in the ref using microsatellite markers have shown that introduced populations in California possess only about 50% of the alleles and one-third the expected heterozygosity of native populations. Additionally, introduced populations in California are genetically homogeneous over large distances (up to 1000 km), whereas native populations possess
genetic structure over tens to hundreds of meters. So, if social evolution is a human trait, it is one shared with an ant, and thus is another example of a quantitative rather than qualitative distinction.
edited to add: To clarify, this means that an Argentine ant from California taken to Australia would get its butt whipped by the Australian supercolony. Sorry. It was a good point, anyway.
This message has been edited by Quetzal, 02-15-2005 19:11 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 35 by Aximili23, posted 02-14-2005 1:25 PM Aximili23 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 57 by Aximili23, posted 02-16-2005 6:46 AM Quetzal has not replied

  
Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5901 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 68 of 102 (185895)
02-16-2005 2:33 PM
Reply to: Message 60 by mike the wiz
02-16-2005 9:31 AM


Re: What is quality from the dimension of time?
Is that a qualititive difference? If not - then nothing will ever qualify for this illusive title.
Ya know, mike, you just put your finger on the whole point of what PS has been saying to you: the reason we're having a hard time coming up with a qualitative difference here is that it simply may not exist. All the arguments and examples you've put forward on this thread are quantitative (differences, sometimes extreme, of degree rather than kind). Unfortunately, since you're the one who is instisting that there's a difference in kind between humans and "animals", you're stuck in the position of finding support for the claim. Best of luck, but I think you're going to be disappointed.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 60 by mike the wiz, posted 02-16-2005 9:31 AM mike the wiz has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 69 by mike the wiz, posted 02-16-2005 2:44 PM Quetzal has replied

  
Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5901 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 74 of 102 (185934)
02-16-2005 4:13 PM
Reply to: Message 69 by mike the wiz
02-16-2005 2:44 PM


Re: What is quality from the dimension of time?
Quetzal - that really doesn't mean much what you've just posted, apart from patting your ideologically inclined friend on the back. Because if one thinks that nothing would qualify as a qualititive difference, then "qualititive difference" means nothing.
Thanks for the insult, mikey. You know, you've really become a jerk recently. What's up with that?
However, to address your "point", the reason everything you've presented obvious as "quality" - a measurable or quantifiable difference - over "quantity" - a matter of degree as on a continuum, is because they are NOT equivalent, in spite of your continued assertion to the contrary. Try thinking of it this way: a qualitative or categorical trait is one which you can use for classification of individuals (or populations or species or whatever) based on some attribute or characteristic. A quantitative trait allows a numerical or unique identifier to be applied to the population. IOW, it can be counted. A more germane use of qualitative in this context means a fundamental, functional difference (say, like between a house and a sidewalk). If humans ARE so different (i.e., not animals) and unique, a quantitative difference would be how you would approach it.
Example; Animals might be unique in what they can do. But we are unique in what we can't do. I think this fundamental difference is a big example of how we are uniquely different. If a shark cannot fly - then that's the end of that. If a rat can only run fast, then that's the end of that. But when it comes to what we can't do, then we have an ability to defy our very natural limits, and do it anyway
I think that this is most definitely a quality difference
No, it's a quantitative difference, as animals can and do engage in niche construction and modification of their environment for their own purposes. Just like humans. You seem to keep harping on our ability to use technology to transcend limitations as being a qualitative difference. Since there are numerous examples of animal species using tools of various sorts to overcome personal limitations, your examples are indeed quantitative, not qualitative.
Where did I mention difference in kind? Please quote me.
Oh, give me a break. I used "kind" not in the idiotic biblical sense, but in the sense of apposition to "degree", hence the expression: "difference in degree, not kind". Stop being deliberately obtuse, it doesn't become you.
Look at your avatar, it shows actually shows a difference between a human and a dog in itself. You wear clothes, because you're not just an animal. When you press "reply" then what represents this oddity?
I wear clothes in large measure because my ancestors evolved in an environment where they didn't have to. Clothing allowed us to move into unoccupied "large primate" niches unavailable to those without it. My dog, on the other hand, evolved in a much colder area, and therefore isn't REQUIRED to wear clothes for survival. She's got fur, after all. As far as "pressing reply", that's just technology - quantitative vice qualitative. Your argument from personal incredulity is failing here, mike.
I've also said that quality = quantity.
This means that all animals have had time, over the years, to put their apparently equal(to humans) unique differences to the test, and they haven't shown anequivalent ability or quality. Chocolate and fruit.
However, there have been "animals" over time that HAVE developed just as much chocolate-ness as we have. I give you the hominids (both ancestral and not) who manufactured tools, some used fire, almost all were cooperative hunter/foragers, etc. So basically although you continue to ASSERT that quality=quantity, you have neither made a cogent argument for us to accept it NOR have you provided any evidence to back up your claim.
edited to clarify, and to remove gratuitous insults.
This message has been edited by Quetzal, 02-16-2005 16:18 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 69 by mike the wiz, posted 02-16-2005 2:44 PM mike the wiz has not replied

  
Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5901 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 77 of 102 (185993)
02-16-2005 7:38 PM
Reply to: Message 75 by mike the wiz
02-16-2005 4:55 PM


I am looking at it from a perspective of species. What can a species do. Can our species design/create artificially, to make up for what it can not do naturally? If it can, can other species pertaining to natural ability? No they can't.
Yes, they can, and you've been given numerous examples of this by many people, including me. In case you missed it: ANIMALS MAKE AND USE TOOLS. They do this naturally to overcome limitations of their morphology. JUST LIKE HUMANS.
You have not only been refuted, your argument has been obliterated.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 75 by mike the wiz, posted 02-16-2005 4:55 PM mike the wiz has not replied

  
Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5901 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 80 of 102 (186018)
02-16-2005 10:08 PM
Reply to: Message 78 by mike the wiz
02-16-2005 8:51 PM


Re: Irrefutable mike strikes
Okay, mike. You win. Tomorrow I'm going to throw out all my science books to make room for bible exegesis, Chick tracts, and self-help books. Then I'll cancel my subscriptions to Conservation Biology and Skeptical Inquirer (I assume I can keep my Military History Quarterly subscription?). Finally, I go in and clean out all those old peer-reviewed article files clogging up my computer.
Your wisdom and brilliant rhetoric has made my journey to the Dark Side complete.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 78 by mike the wiz, posted 02-16-2005 8:51 PM mike the wiz has not replied

  
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