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[Neuroscience] Re: why did humans grow a bigger neocortex?

John H. via neur-sci%40net.bio.net (by bingblat from goaway.com.au)
Tue Sep 4 03:10:44 EST 2007


"Randolph" <solor from cmc.net> wrote in message
news:13din4dartu9223 from corp.supernews.com...

Incorrect, many animals engage in very complex behaviors in order to kill
and maim. And yes they even do it just because they can. Warfare arises
because of our success and the need for the resources, not vice versa.
Typically anyway, but for my money for every rule one creates about human
behavior one can find another bloody exception ...

> WAR.  Human beings are the only animal where GROUPS go to war against one
> another.  This puts major environmental pressure on the abilitity to work
as
> a team (to achieve a social act) - which requires more social complexity
and
> more communication abilities.  This has pushed human evolution BEYOND
nature
> (the level of other animals) because only another human group poses a
> substantial threat to a human group (no other natural threat is as
severe).
> Ironically, it is human warfare that has given us all our gifts of
> intelligence.
>
>
> "rAgAv" <ragav.payne from googlemail.com> wrote in message
> news:1184469559.678291.133340 from o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've been wondering why human beings alone have that big, unique and
> > complex cortex. Can you help me with your views?
> >
> > --
> > rAgAv
> >
>
>




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