Hobbes' Choice wrote:I see you ignored the other points in my post.
I didn't have any problem with them; they were not contrary to my own observations. Non-comment is agreement, not lack of an answer.
But even the way you describe the puppy finding a nipple implies knowledge. A foal knows how to run within 24 hours, this cannot be explained by learning. It also "knows" to run.
Of course, there is 'inherited knowledge', or instinct, which is passed on from one generation to the next, even as species mutate into ever-more complex species. The quest for nourishment is one The first bacterium figured it out and passed it on to all its fissioned progeny, and we still have that same life instinct. The same goes for those parts of the brain that control physical functions. The autonomous ones, we're not even aware of (until they malfunction); the voluntary ones, we have to test and train and teach new skills. Everybody's born knowing how to breathe and excrete, but watch a newborn figure out how to get its fingers into its mouth (They've been practicing for three months in utero, but when the body position changes - expands in the wider outside world - they have to learn it all over again. The foal has to figure out how to control its legs before it can run. Running is a simple task: requires more autonomic functions than learned skills. Large herbivores learn it faster than humans - in hours, rather than months - because they're born with more developed bones and muscles. Human babies could figure out the function, but haven't the skeletal or muscular strength.
There is no possible way to 'learn' that a predator is dangerous. Each young deer has to 'know' that.
There is the mistake! The way they learn that something is dangerous is by example. If the mother runs, they run with her; they won't run away on their own. They do
not know what a predator is. If the nearest warn body to newborn fawn were a wolf, it would go to the wolf and butt its side, seeking a nipple. They can be imprinted on a goat or a human or whatever feeds them. That's why so many unusual pairings happen in captivity: it's not unusual for a dog to raise baby animals that
should be afraid of canines, but don't know it.
https://www.google.ca/search?q=dogs+rai ... 59&bih=690
Babies DO know about the danger of falling. All primates are born with this mechanism; but human babies can loose it.
Fear of falling doesn't translate to an understanding of things you can fall off of. They clutch at whatever - air, hair, bedclothes - when they're already falling or losing their balance: that's automatic and instinctive. They do
not recognize cliffs, top of the stairs, edge of the bed, windowsill or any of the other things babies routinely do crawl to and off.
You have the idea of natural selection backwards. This is a common enough fault.
The attempt to build a society of willing serfs requires that the masses need to be subservient. Thus as this society develops only those class of surfs are 'selected'.
By whom? Through what process? If you eliminate the mechanism of strong men screwing all available women, what selection process is left? Monogamy is all fine and well - and recent! - less than 100 generations and even today, not in all cultures. Nor did it ever limit the fecundity of caliphs and chieftains, popes and dukes, sheiks and plantation owners. Castes certainly exist, but they're enforced by social rules - often a spear- or gun-point - not genetic predisposition. And, of course, all of that reproductive regulation goes out the window during war - of which there have been many - and mass migration.
Myths about Ghengis Khan do not count as evidence.
The fact of aggressive males persists.
http://www.nature.com/news/genghis-khan ... on-1.16767