05-01-2010, 06:02 AM | #11 | |
SOM3WH3R3
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Well, when Sith said "tools" he didn't just include tie-a-rock-to-a-stick style contraptions, he also mentioned
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05-01-2010, 06:33 AM | #12 | ||
Whoa we got a tough guy here.
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People like to talk about how smart parrots are, but crows are pretty scary when it comes to logic.
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05-01-2010, 06:54 AM | #13 | ||
Existential Toast
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If creativity is a process of building new information out of known facts and observations, then we're doing it all the time. Of course, that can readily be argued to be too broad a definition as well. Quote:
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05-01-2010, 09:47 AM | #14 | |
Friendly Neighborhood Quantum Hobo
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Our brain might have been big but it wasn't wired for the kind of abstract creative thinking we do now until tool use became an integral part of our survival. That is when we moved onto the plains, started walking on two legs, and started stealing meat from predators. Our hands where free all the time to hold and make better tools and we needed better organization just to stay alive in the open. Thus those of us with brains wired for more and more creativity survived. Plus the extra energy from the meat really helped power a more active brain. Which is why we beat out some of the other early plains primates that were largely vegetarian but otherwise quite like us. As for modern humans; everyone is creative in the sense that everyone can think of abstract things that don't exist. (Except maybe those with Autism.) Some people are just better at it than others. Of course even back when we first developed creativity there must have been people much better at it than other people. The only difference is back then they had a better chance of living and producing offspring than the less creative and now that isn't really a problem. Evolutionarily speaking people with very little creativity aren't as well adapted for survival. (Which would probably include me as I am no artist. Although I can be creative with problem solving so who knows.) |
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05-01-2010, 10:12 AM | #15 | ||
History's Strongest Dilettante
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"There are worlds out there where the sky is burning, and the sea is asleep, and the rivers dream. People made of smoke and cities made of song. Somewhere there's danger, somewhere there's injustice, somewhere else the tea's getting cold. Come on, Ace; we've got work to do!" Awesome art be here. Last edited by BitVyper; 05-01-2010 at 10:14 AM. |
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05-01-2010, 11:56 AM | #16 |
Friendly Neighborhood Quantum Hobo
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I'm not sure anyone knows exactly when it happened. I'm relatively sure that it was probably when the climate changed and we moved onto the plains at least. That's when we had to go upright and when we had to significantly change how we survived. It seems like a good bet for when tools became really integral to survival.
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05-01-2010, 12:19 PM | #17 |
Sent to the cornfield
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No they had a pretty good idea when it happened and it was well before it was needed.
The leading idea was that climate change was one of the key factors in seperating the species in that those with more creative potential started to survive because they needed it. Brain varation happened before this though. While the climate change was probably the selector there is a struggle to explain why some variations of humans created such massive brains before they were needed (and in this case, size actually is a reasonably indicator of complexity- somewhat total size but more importantly number of connections) as there was vastly more energy needed to create them. Well this is me takig it on faifth from a guy I met at a conference but he was a leadign theoretical biologist so I trust that he knew what was he talking about. Last edited by Professor Smarmiarty; 05-01-2010 at 12:23 PM. |
05-01-2010, 12:34 PM | #18 |
Argus Agony
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Might depend on how severe a case of autism we're talking about.
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05-01-2010, 12:39 PM | #19 | |
Friendly Neighborhood Quantum Hobo
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Further, I would posit that tool use started as an enhancement to survival. Thus even when we were still in the trees the smartest ones survived the best. Everyone else survived too but not as well. More intelligence is always better for survival even if you aren't making stone axes yet. Then later a true brain explosion occurred when being smart wasn't just a matter of surviving better but surviving at all. |
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05-01-2010, 12:40 PM | #20 |
DA-DA-DA-DAA DAA DAA DA DA-DAAAAAA!
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I'm just going with "art" because "creativity" is too obscure (because then you're bringing in things like creative problem solving, etc).
As far as art is concerned, it originally came about as a method of record keeping, I believe. Before written language, things such as cave paintings were used to chronicle things (and they tell us a lot about prehistoric cultures.) In languages like Chinese, those pictures eventually turned into their written language. Because people back then were hunters and gatherers and would be traveling a lot, the oldest art was very large in size and left in the places so I imagine one could say that it was kind of a way to mark our territory, or at least to say that we had been there. Later cultures that were more permanently settled would make art that was more functional (like pottery). And a lot of art was made as deity worship. (Yay art history?)
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