What do you think separates humans from other animals?

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SD-Fiend

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satanslawer123 said:
that other animals though primitive are a hell of a lot smarter than we are. they've learnt to adapt to there environment, they learned the dangers and learned to adapt to keep away from those dangers till they have to face them, whereas humans see a danger and think the only way to live is go in all guns blazing and destroying it till there's nothing left. destroy natural habitats just to make concrete jungles. we pollute the planet killing it and we just cant leave stuff how it is always trying to one up it and in the end with all our greed we will end up killing ourselves and the planet
not really. an animal may adapt to it's environment but not right away, any species that has lived in an environment may adapt to it over a period of time but that's probably a long ways away.and who says animal don't destroy their own environments? have you ever heard of locust swarms?
 

SD-Fiend

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Wushu Panda said:
Mau95 said:
Wushu Panda said:
Credossuck said:
Why am i better than an animal? Different?



we are the one with the best chances to keep this planet non-nuked-from-space
Exactly why are we the best chance? What do you think would have been the odds of the Earth being at risk of getting nuked from space if humans had not placed the nukes there in the first place? Since you don't think animals could ever do this, I assume the odds would be zero. Because no other animal on earth is stupid enough to destroy their own species and habitat for the next several million plus years.
I think he means against aliens.
This isn't an alien topic but ok. If aliens did appear in our orbit, and rained downed nukes from above...we would die. Humans dont have anything that could shoot nuclear missiles out of the sky. Even if they could, they would be detonating nuclear missiles in the sky. Its a lose/lose situation. We either get nuked dieing fast, or rain radioactive material upon us killing us slowly.

Here is a likely conversation:
Alien 1 "Oh look. We seem to have found a Class E planet."
Alien 2 "I LOVE CLASS E PLANETS! The inhabitants are so interesting and the scenery is so beautiful. Where do the scanners suggest a landing point?"
Alien 1 "No where. My scanners indicate massive amounts of radiation pockets in several locations and even more areas contaminated with a rainbow of toxins."
Alien 2 "What could have happened?"
Alien 1 "Scans show all the material isn't natural. Material level is indicative of artificial creation...they did this to themselves."
Alien 2 "What kind of terrible life forms would poison their own planet? Nuke it, they don't deserve to have interstellar travel and alien orgies."
those aliens seem to be worse than you say we are...
 

thiosk

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CulixCupric said:
What do you think separates humans from other animals?
Oh my god, 11 pages of posts. Good work setting off a postvalanch.

I'll chime in, though.

I can sit around my house doing something, and I can think about what I'm doing. Then I can think about the idea that I can think about thinking about doing something. Then I can think about thinking about thinking, and so on, and so fourth.

There is no evidence that any animal is capable of even one layer, while the human consciousness is in principle capable of infinite layers.

A monkey can figure out how to find a treat in a puzzle box. But the monkey will never, ever be able to improve the puzzle box to make the treat more difficult to find.
 

Biodeamon

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the difference is squeamishness. anything else some animal has or will do or be grossed out (fear doesn't count).
 

Mandalore_15

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Haseo21 said:
I don't want to say "soul" because I don't think everyone believes in one, but, personally, that is one to me.

I'm going to have to go with the ability to stray from instinct and making certain decisions based on critical thinking.
You don't think animals have souls? Kinda harsh...
 

Rowan93

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There's no actual dividing line, we just happen to be smart enough that we made technology. And civilization, but that and most of the other things that flow from that are more or less the same thing in these terms. They're tools created by humans, with the help of that big, bulbous bag of neurons, to better themselves in some way or other.
 

uguito-93

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Our ability to reason, to think in the long term and the knowledge that we will eventually die.
 

thiosk

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chadachada123 said:
(You could say that the extension of life expectancy is bad for our population problem, but that's the fault of shitty legislation and social stuff, not science, science is innocent here).
You could say that, but it would be misinformed, which is typical of the misanthropic tilt of so many on this forum. The vast majority of population growth, and the large risks to future planetary sustainability, comes from all the developing countries. Western europe and japan have already began to decline in population due to fewer children being born.

The only thing keeping the united states population increasing steadily is immigration, and the babies born to immigrants, which is far more characteristic of the developing world than of the developed.

We tend to consume more resources each in the developed world, but at the pace the undeveloped are reproducing, they already have zero chance of being able to uplift themselves to western standards of living in a reasonable timeframe.

And then you get goons on forums like this who blame science for all of society's ills. Ugh. Im with you, bud, science is innocent here.
 

NezumiiroKitsune

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Sentience separates us from most, and what separates us from other animals with sentience, is a huge cerebrum, particularly the cerebral cortex and developed frontal lobes.

I mean, you could debate this physiologically, and philosophically, and psychologically for decades upon decades, and not get a much more final answer, and of course, people have, and continue to do.

Sentience is not as simple as having or not having either. Degrees of sentience have been established, wherein we can put arbitrary values to it. It raises a lot of ethical and philosophical problems though. I consider self-awareness to be of particular importance, and at the moment will not eat nor condone the farming or hunting of anything that can exhibit it.
 

LilithSlave

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Well, I don't know of any other animal that can consent to sexual intercourse.

At least outside of fiction.
 

AladdinSane

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CulixCupric said:
What do you think separates humans from other animals?
Self-awareness. Notions of morality. Yearning for the transcendant.

(A whole lot of words and concepts so that I can say, "God gave us a soul but not them" in a world that wishes to pretend there is no God)
 

AladdinSane

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kittii-chan 300 said:
there is absolutely no difference between humans and animals
Which animals have a legal system, and adjudicate transgressions? Which animal recognizes the rights of other animals? Which animals employ worthless bits of metal or paper as currency? Which animals worship?

Obviously, there are *vast* differences between humans, and the rest of the animals on Earth. Obviously.
 

AladdinSane

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NezumiiroKitsune said:
I consider self-awareness to be of particular importance, and at the moment will not eat nor condone the farming or hunting of anything that can exhibit it.
The omnivore who, by design, is supposed to eat animals as well as plants. Yet he won't, due to some unusual sense of right and wrong that only humans possess. No other animal cares what it eats, it just eats it.

We are vastly different. We have souls.
 

AladdinSane

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thiosk said:
The only thing keeping the united states population increasing steadily is immigration
The total fertility rate in America is 2.79, and replacement fertility rate is roughly 2.1.

Thus, American population would continue to grow even in the total absence of immigration. We do not yet suffer the inevitable extinction that our European cousins face.

If a people goes two generations with a fertility rate below 2.1, they become extinct. There is no precedent for any people or race ever recovering. Every nation in Europe has been below replacement fertility for longer than two generations.

Your claim is applicable to them, but not to us.
 

Wushu Panda

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AladdinSane said:
kittii-chan 300 said:
there is absolutely no difference between humans and animals
Which animals have a legal system, and adjudicate transgressions? Which animal recognizes the rights of other animals? Which animals employ worthless bits of metal or paper as currency? Which animals worship?

Obviously, there are *vast* differences between humans, and the rest of the animals on Earth. Obviously.
Currency, eh? There was a study to teach monkeys a system of currency. You know what they found? They behave exactly as humans. A researcher noticed that some monkeys were paying others for sex.

http://www.diggersrealm.com/mt/archives/001105.html

It was intended, it wasn't part of the original experiment. But once monkeys learned the concept, they started abusing it. Similar studies have been conducted. Monkeys also showed the ability to figure out that it's beneficial to buy products when it's priced low, and after the prices rise again...sell it back just under market value.

We really aren't all the different.

And here's a dog that risks its life to save another dog. Explain that.

 

kittii-chan 300

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AladdinSane said:
kittii-chan 300 said:
there is absolutely no difference between humans and animals
Which animals have a legal system, and adjudicate transgressions? Which animal recognizes the rights of other animals? Which animals employ worthless bits of metal or paper as currency? Which animals worship?

Obviously, there are *vast* differences between humans, and the rest of the animals on Earth. Obviously.
Yes, that's at the moment. If you gave them a few billion years then they probably could.

And we already did the currency thing and apparently monkeys can. How would you know if animals worship or not? Animals do recognise the rights of other animals, I believe, such as rights to territory and stuff. Ants might have a legal system. Or bees. Do you watch animals constantly? Do you know what they are thinking? no.

And everything has a soul, not just humans.