CoastTwoCoast
Bluelighter
^^ ^ where do you two get your fortune cookies from?
lol!
^^ ^ where do you two get your fortune cookies from?
I'm glad you had no part in the evolution of human thought.
I have found that human thought does not evolve.
Language and style has evolved but IMO human thought which is connected to our emotions has changed very little if any over time.
Yeah, I don't know about that. Hormones influence thoughts and emotions, but so do a lot of other things. Society creates the framework for how we think, more or less. So - as society evolves - our thought patterns change accordingly... But, I think you're more saying if you took society out of the picture that our brains would be anatomically identical to humans in early primitive societies and people would be the same as "cavemen". I don't think that's true, either.
Yeah. I've tried to study the language of crows when I was pretty whacked out, and even though I was pretty out of it, I came to the conclusion that they must have a LOT of words in their vocabulary.Agreed. I think the human brain has continued to evolve since "cave men" days and there have been hardware improvements, although the vast majority of our change has been (and will continue to be) through culture. I think that generations upon generations of different parts of the brain being more survival-advantageous will have naturally led to those parts of the brain being more active/primed for use/evolved. Though as humans we evolve pretty slowly since our generations are so long.
One of the most interesting things about humans is that we evolve primarily through culture. Other animals also evolve through culture (for example, the black bears in my area have successfully taught each other through generations to figure out bear bags for campers (find the rope, cut it), so we had to develop "bear canisters" now and bear bags are not allowed anymore. Also crows are able to communicate the faces of specific human aggressors across populations and generations without actually showing the face to other crows).