spuriousmonkey said:
Biology 101
There are extremely stupid animals (with hardly a brain worth mentioning) that can sense extremely well. That's right. It is not 'necessary' to have a big brain to sense very well. You may argue that it is, but nature shows that it isn't.
I am not arguing that it is. What I said was that improvement in our own sense of smell would require an enlargement of our own olfactory bulb, which is part of the brain.
Therefore we have arrived at a point that you have a postulation and not a general correlation.
I recall seeing comparisons of the size of different animal's olfactory bulbs. The point of these comparisons was to show that those with the larger olfactory bulbs had the better sense of smell. I never made the assertion that larger brains in general automatically leads to better senses. Better senses do, though, require that the part of the brain which governs a given sense be larger.
If it was really that easy (better sense of environment means better evolutionary fitness by means of a bigger brain) why didn't other animals follow the same path?
They have when having a better sense represented an advantage over others of their own kind. Consider a mouse born with an .02 % greater mass in its olfactory bulb than any mouse before it. This increase in neurons, let us stipulate, makes it far more sensitive to the smell of a certain kind of insect which the mice eat but which has such a faint aroma that they usually can't find them unless they're right on top of them. This mouse, with its increased ability to distinguish smells, can smell this insect at a distance of half a foot. It becomes fat and happy and breeds a lot of litters.
Note that your characterization of what I said: "(better sense of environment means better evolutionary fitness by means of a bigger brain)", is a mischaracterization. I am not asserting that a bigger brain, per se, is necessarily an advantage. It is only an advantage if it does something of use to the species that possesses it. I agree, though, with Ramachandrian that consciousness is differential phenomenon: we are conscious of the
differences between things. His speculation that our own abilities to distinguish one thing from another was an advantage over earlier versions of our species makes perfect sense to me.
I am also not saying it is "that easy". I was singling this particular phenomenon out for observation in response to the original question. You somehow misconstrued me to be saying this is the only factor that is of any importance, which I wasn't.