Entropy said:
No, you think Dinosaurs were any less complicated than mammals today?
Are you suggesting that dinos are as complex as humans? Humans have the ability to bear their young alive and on the move, and feed the infants from glandular secretions. These might not seem like complexities to you, but they do to me, and they are the most basic features of mammals...there are more.
Entropy said:
You're only support is that humans, the most complex/intelligent of animals, exist now and less complicated/intelligent creatures existed before us, therefore you conclude that all life must strive to become more complicated/intelligent. That doesn't sound like very good reasoning to me.
That is not the only support. Do you think that the first birds were as intelligent and sociable as the Macaws and African Greys of today? Not likely. And creatures do not strive to become more intelligent. That is a misapprehension. Creatures become more intelligent when intelligence has a greater survival value than the cost of the trade-offs. It is pure natural selection. Birds with heavier beaks and strong mandibular muscles can break heavier and heavier nuts and eat food that other birds can't exploit. A macaw can eat palm nuts that other birds can't touch. The heavy beaks and muscles were a result of natural selection, not a decision on the part of the macaws. Same with intelligence.
Entropy said:
No one is saying that intelligence isn't usefull. Plus you're thinking of intelligence late in evolution and it isn't always as simple as creatures gaining the intelligence of humans over night. You see whenever a creature evolves a certain aspect it can also come with a cost.
I never claimed that intelligence develops overnight in any species, nor that intelligence will benefit every species. I merely pointed out that whenever intelligence has a positive survival value, that the intelligence of complex creatures will tend to improve. This is basic to the process of natural selection.
Entropy said:
Sure, some species will increase in intelligence to a point but once cost outweights benifit they will stop. You think whales have been getting any smarter in the last few hundred thousand years? They're at the point where it won't matter how much smarter they are because they already about ten times smarter than their prey.
We don't know how smart whales are. We do know that their communications evolve over very short time periods and show regional "accents". BTW, if you will do a search on the terms "Essex" and "Mocha Dick" you will see that sperm whales are not particularly dumb, and that one whale in particular held a grudge against the ships that whaled in the South Pacific in the early 1800s. He was very well-known amongst the whalers and the military, and he was the basis for a VERY famous novel.
Entropy said:
Well, seeing that +99.9% it isn't favored, I would say it is quite unreasonable. Maybe if more than one intelligent civilizations had evolved on Earth in the last 4.5 billion years I'd be less sceptical.
You may have a different definition of intelligence than I do. I can tell you from decades of pet ownership that intelligence has a lot to do with how a creature interacts with its environment. A 2-3 lb ferret, who can grasp and manipulate things with its front paws while sitting upright is WAY smarter than a typical house cat and is pound-for-pound a genius compared with dogs. You should see what happens when a couple of 1.5# female ferrets decide to harrass an otherwise very sharp mixed-breed dog. I gave a couple of ferrets to a friend with a very personable and clever dog and those girls made his life hell until my friend installed a barrier that the girls couldn't get over and gave Gollum a space that only he and the humans could get to.
A racoon is a whole lot smarter and more of a troublemaker than a bobcat. You can see that intelligence is not simply a matter of simple body mass or brain-mass:body-mass ratio. Intelligence is more valuable and more selectable (by survival value) for some species and less so for others. I don't see really smart sharks in our future...they are already as efficient as they need to be without intelligence - did you notice that they have developed teeth to a high art?
Entropy said:
Just so you know I don't think we will ever find extraterrestrial life-forms, ever. Space just isn't as peaceful as people think.
We may not ever find extraterrestrial life, but that's because of our own limitations, not because extraterrestrial life does not exist. I will be very surprised if we do not find fossil evidence of past life on Mars, even if it's only lithophiles.