Quote:
Originally Posted by
Sir Humphrey Appleby 
In that case it isn't logical, but its true. I suppose we evolved to not be cannibals to further the chances of the race becoming more widespread.
I wonder why, since pigs are so clever and sheep are so stupid, yet we eat pork much more than venison if meat consumption is about intelligence?
Have you ever seen a vegetarian? Tiny straggly things that couldn't lift a feather, there's a reason why we evolved to eat meat.
Are you one of these people who says we shouldn't kill animals ourselves if we can buy it in a packet in a shop to pass on the guilt of the animal's death to the abbatoir?
It's not true that "cannibalism is bad because its cannibalism". it doesn't make sense and that's why you are unable to explain it. Other species are inclined to further their race and can still sometimes be cannibalistic.
Many people have a false belief that humans and other animals are entirely different. That explains why they don't consider an animals cognitive abilities.
You are stereotyping vegetarians. A vegetarian doesn't have to be weak and lacking muscle mass. see here:
http://vegetarianmeals.org/how-the-v...scle-building/
No, I'm not one of those people at all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
speedy4500 
So you're telling me if a chicken had hands, they'd be traveling to the Moon?

Humans have special capacity in our brains to process abstract notions, outside of physical reality. Are there any other animals in existence that have shown any ability to "get" such abstract concepts as God/religion or The Universe or even basic mathematics? Oh, but I guess if they had hands they could.... someone should tell Stephen Hawking that since his hands don't work, he's an idiot.
Any example of "animal intelligence" is usually a result of humans training animals to do something--and really no different than humans programming a computer--instead of organic intelligence that humans, and only humans, possess. No one knows how or why we have this extraordinary mental capability and imagination... it's the greatest mystery known to man.
Chickens are an extreme example considering they aren't mammals and their brains aren't very similar to ours. It's no coincidence that the most superior animal species is the only one with hands, other than ancestral primates.
Dolphins are very much capable of a similar thinking process to ours as well as any other species that uses complex language (just dolphins and elephants as far as I know). They of course do not have a concept of god because that's a cultural mythology created by humans. The universe is irrelevant to them because they do not have a means to know about it. They know basic principles of numbers.
Animal intelligence is not dependent on human training and a human not having hands would not decrease their intelligence. It's no mystery why we have the mental capacity we do, it's mostly due to our hands which give us an ability to manipulate our environment. Without them, there isn't much reason to develop the intelligence level we have. Every unnatural object can be attributed to hands.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
speedy4500 
The difference is that as human beings, we understand that an infant or ill person may not have, at that moment, the ability to comprehend morality or contribute to the survival of our species, but we DO presume that such a person has the CAPACITY to do so in the future. Animals can't understand that. They have no concept of the future beyond their next meal, or of further generations of their species. When an animal kills their own young, they don't think about how that baby might be able to contribute to their species in the future... they just know that at that moment, their offspring is becoming a hindrance to the immediate task at hand. The ability for animals to weight future benefits versus current costs is trivial at best.
I get that you want to rank animals on some intelligence scale. That's what humans do--we like to rank and organize and develop ideas, matters of which all other animals wouldn't understand. The first division in that scale is simple: humans and non-humans. And it shouldn't be a vertical ranking so much as an entirely different branch altogether. The difference is as vast as eukaryotes and prokaryotes. That's all I need to know.... you can waste your time ranking the intelligence of all my food in the non-human category.
More stereotyping and demeaning of other species with no basis in fact. The problem is breaking it into two categories of humans and non-humans because there is no reasoning behind it. The explanations are again dependent on an anatomical part that other animals other than primates do not have.