
A new video from Ze Frank is out, this time about Geckos. True to form, Frank masterfully illustrates ze genius of other life forms. One amazingly-intricate evolutionary adaptation after another leaves us grasping to make sense of the various superpowers manifesting in the living world. If Ze Frank’s videos don’t leave your mouth agape, there might be something wrong with your jawe (the anatomical feature best suited for expressing awe). I admire his skilled and unabashed use of anthropomorphism to imbue these characters with personality and desire. He’s not wrong, and our culture could use a great deal more appreciation for the shared engagement of all Life.
Now, it does pain me to see the torture that animals are subjected to in laboratory environments just so that we might attempt a deeper understanding. Admittedly, part of my sense of amazement is enhanced by partial scientific understanding of the phenomena. Yet, it would still be possible to put superpowers on display without the clinical Nazi part. As is true for so many things in modernity, the act of scraping some veneer of “good stuff” leaves devastation in its wake. It’s seldom worth it, in the full analysis.
But the main point of this post is to reconcile the genius of microbes, fungi, plants and animals (of which we are part) with their obvious “dumb” qualities as well. To wit: a spider can weave an elaborate web I’d have no hope of replicating, yet when stuck in a sink will repeatedly try—and fail—to climb the steepest wall. Clinging to spider webs for a moment (they’re like that), birds also weave nests using spider webs and other bits of fluff, moss, twigs, spit, and many other seemingly random elements. I know I couldn’t pull it off, even allowed unlimited spit. But a bird in a garage with the door wide-open can exhaust himself trying to fly into the ceiling, never realizing he can fly right out the enormous opening. A honeybee has many jobs in her lifetime: rearing; feeding; storing food; cleaning and maintaining the hive; patrolling and defending; foraging and finding new nest sites—communicating by both dances and chemicals. Yet trying to escape a house, she will bump into a window until she dies—never “getting” the whole glass concept. In the opposite direction, ants innovate in their foraging strategies so that they find ways into (and back out of) a house that would never occur to us—often repeatedly outwitting us as we try to block one route or anther. But their brains are tiny, and they’re not even on social media.
I could go on, of course, but the idea should be clear enough. What I want to briefly explore is this contrast between genius and dumb-as-a-brick (a recent post explored human dumbness). How are both true at once, and how might we, as humans, be both different and basically the same?
Feedback
Firstly, the secret to the superpower-genius of living beings all traces to feedback in an evolutionary context. The gecko’s feet are as amazing as they are because that’s what works well for them—honed over deep time. If their sticky feet didn’t have clever ways of dealing with dirt or water or an enormous range of surface conditions, then they wouldn’t be here.
I think part of the reason that we experience awe when delving into the inner mysteries of gecko spatulae or hummingbird tongues derives from our distorted perspective as cognitive designers. The dumb machines we fashion have great difficulty dealing with rather routine environmental challenges—like rain, dirt, thermal cycles, corrosion, etc. Our bicycles don’t self-lubricate, self-clean, self-inflate tires, self-replace stretched chains, self-replicate (with variation) or any of the other amazing self-care feats common to Life of every sort. It is in this sense that the inventions of evolution appear to have miraculous capabilities: we’re comparing to truly stupid (largely-open-loop) inventions of our own lowly cognitive origin.
Compared to evolutionary innovations, our contraptions do not emerge embedded in a strong web of (negative) feedback loops in a deep-time complex of contexts. They have no hope of being impressive. Yet we call ourselves geniuses for making these pathetic—and incidentally destructive—assemblages.
Dumbness
This site often emphasizes the genius of other Life—in part to counter the culturally-prevalent view of animals as dumb (and plants as not even capable of being dumb).
How might we square this emphasis with the fact that it is not difficult to spot examples of animals being dumb: a deer paralyzed by rapidly-approaching headlights; a beta fish getting riled up by its own reflection; a cat reaching behind the television to get at a bird pictured on the screen; a dog trying to bury a treat on the carpet by scraping imaginary dirt over it; a raptor getting smacked by a windmill blade; a fatal encounter of a bird flying into an ordinary, stationary window. I’m sure pet owners have no shortage of amusing stories about cognitive shortcomings of our companions.
Yet, surely animals find humans to be inexplicably dumb in the ways in which they themselves excel. If bats had YouTube, they’d be obsessed with videos of humans running into obstacles in the dark. Most mammals must laugh to watch us run: such slow-pokes for all that flailing motion! Dogs can’t fathom our lack of olfactory awareness: totally oblivious to the stories laid out plain as day in front of our noses. Birds witness our grounded inferiority, only able to get airborne in these loud and heavy hunks that lack almost any of the grace exhibited by birds (watch a bird zip into a dense tree and come to an immediate stop on a twig deep within—and imagine an airplane doing anything of the sort!).
Context
Most instances we might dredge up of animals being dumb share a common element. They are “dumb” in their inability to cope with an artificial (non-ecological) environment of human fashioning. Our roads, buildings, and other technologies are not part of their evolutionary context. A video compilation of “dumb animals” overwhelmingly involves animals out of an ecological context. It stands to reason: this is the world we inhabit and know, and the one in which we hold video devices.
It is in their native domains that the genius of Life shines. And it kind-of has to. Otherwise these beings would not be here. That’s the feedback part: what it means to be deeply embedded in a loop. The universe is a challenging, varying, not-wholly-predictable place with plenty of randomness to go around. Any living being—microbes and all—have to be geniuses to even persist in this place. As a reminder, we still don’t know how most of it works/interacts, and presumably never will.
But here’s the thing: humans are also a species out of context. Many elements of our present-day existence are not part of our evolutionary history either—having only been around for the last 10,000 years (or even 10, in some cases). And guess what: we’re being totally dumb about it! Yeah: we’re blowing it. We can’t handle the truth. We’ve initiated a sixth mass extinction (6ME), and it’s quite hard to come up with an example of animal dumbness any more profound and consequential than this. I mean, really: a wasp bouncing against a window isn’t anywhere near the same league of “dumb” as a species initiating a sixth mass extinction in an evolutionary blink.
So, when you put humans out of context, we’re pretty dumb, too. Much as the wasp bounces against glass, we bounce against planetary limits, unable to perceive—in aggregate—that there even is any such thing.
Our being so far out of context is likely a large part of the reason so many people are miserable, seek bizarre forms of meaning (severely lacking in modernity itself), and carry a myopic view that the past was even more miserable for humans—the horizon of comparison extending only to the already-fubar post-agricultural fallout of hierarchy, patriarchy, power concentration, money, and all the rest. That’s the only part written down, which we dumbly mistake as being the “main” story of who humans are. Many of us know in our bones that this existence isn’t right, but can’t see what it is we’re bumping up against. We continue to deceive ourselves that a cognitive-based solution exists. We’re that dumb. Bump. Bump. Bump.
Now, to be fair, what humans do have that’s special is an unusual degree of cognitive flexibility that allows quick adaptation to unfamiliar contexts—within limits. It’s an evolutionary adaptation that has/had enough utility to be explored, but may well prove to be a step too far into maladaptive territory (6ME). I hope not, for the sake of our species, but only time will tell.
One of our chief problems (and forms of blinding dumbness) is that we tend to emphasize this cognitive veneer and pretend it’s the only way of being smart: the very definition, in fact. All other forms of life are measured against this severely-flawed scale. Because plants, fungi, and microbes lack even a single neuron, it then makes no sense to speak of the their intelligence. Yet these beings carry out impressive acts of problem-solving every second of every day—by means that elude our cognitive processes. Another Ze Frank video features microbes solving mazes, designing transit systems, learning and passing on knowledge—all without a trace of what our limited perspective labels “cognition.”
My conclusion, then, is that every being (something that “bes”) is genius within its ecological context—having been shaped by evolutionary feedback over deep time in multi-layered elaboration that can’t be anything other than genius. Mixing Shakespeare with a hint of DayKart: To be is to be a genius. Simultaneously, every being is dumb when taken out of their context. As we have taken so many beings out of their ecological context (including humans), we are inundated with examples of how dumb (other) life is. We define the scale so that we win—while in truth everybody loses (6ME), including us.
Sadly, modern humans are masters of contorting—and conjuring—novel contexts. In doing so, we promote the failure of ourselves and of other living beings. We’re not remotely capable of replacing the wisdom of deep-time ecology with our own devisings. It’s far beyond our pay grade. Yet, here we are pretending that this is exactly what we can—and should—do, wrapping ourselves in a mythology that creating novel context is our destiny; our unique privilege; our birthright. Enough with the nonsense. Bring back the humility. It is within our evolved context that human genius is most convincingly expressed.
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We're actually one of the best runners on the planet, at least in respect of endurance: our main hunting method was to simply follow prey at a distance until it got tired.
It is possible that our extreme running abilities contributed more to our early evolutionary survival than our engorged frontal lobes & fancy language centres.
Sure enough; sometimes endurance matters, and sometimes speed. Even a lumbering bear goes twice our speed…and if one is after you, the endurance argument won't hold up in court.
I always travel with people who can't run as fast as me so I don't need to worry about outrunning the bear 🙂
Indeed!
Believe I've recommended it to Tom before, but I'll do it again as I think he'll love it and it is relevant: Born to Run by Christopher McDougall is a great book that heavily discusses leaver/taker culture (but without that frame), is very informative, and is also just a great story.
I'll second this. An excellent book. Made me change my footwear too!
The idea of a species out of context is an excellent way to explain so much of the suffering we see in the world around us. Humans are just as susceptible as any other species, the main difference being that we actively create the inappropriate context we force ourselves to live within.
We've created a lifestyle where most of us must spend 6-8 hours a day sitting at work and then complain about how our spines are so badly "designed" and how humans have so many back problems. We wear thickly padded shoes with lifted heels that force our bodies to walk in a style (heel-to-toe) that leads to even more back, hip, and knee problems. Our mouths grow wisdom teeth that used to fit into broader, stronger jaws evolved to eat tougher foods that are no longer available and the best solution we have to this problem is extremely painful surgery. We stare at screens so much that half the global population will be near-sighted by 2050 yet such an outcome is somehow surprising. We veritably soak our lived environments in microplastics and persistent toxins and wonder why infertility, immune disorders, and cancer rates are increasing. Our culture obsesses over self interest, rationality, and individualism but can't come to grips with the well understood social and emotional disorders created by those very same behaviors.
All this reminds me of "Tech Tuesdays". Its an hour at work every Tuesday where our IT person helps us learn about new educational technologies. The latest fad is AI of course, God help us all. A few weeks ago, instead of the usual lesson about writing prompts and fixing hallucinations, we were invited to come "unplug" from our phones and Chromebooks for 6 whole minutes. I literally laughed at my computer screen. The idea of remedying the harms of constant screen time with 6 minutes "unplugged" is absolutely laughable. We'd all be much better off if the reverse were the norm; 6 minutes of screen time and 8 hours living our lives.
But we can't do that, can we? Because the context we've built in which we're all forced to lived is one wherein humans must endlessly and thoughtlessly sacrifice themselves and the living world to preserve artificial systems whether or not those systems even benefit us. If that's not stupidity then I don't know what is.
Oh yes, we're no better or worse than other species. We just are.
Incidentally, I've recently learned that humans have a better sense of smell than dogs, in some ways. At least if we practice. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/you-actually-smell-better-dog-180963391/
Evolution may have an implicit ceiling on intelligence and we are the experiment currently determining where that ceiling is. If sufficiently complex cognition inevitably leads a species to override its own ecological feedback loops, then it becomes self-terminating. We may be the universe's way of discovering that threshold by crossing it.
Greetings. Thank you!
I would argue that the contexts in which people function also often exhibit “stupidity.” For example, in contexts of evaluating something, many people can rely on ecological, evolutionary, and natural experience, which may be false – tasting a “tasty” and “sweet” apple, which, unfortunately, has accumulated many atoms of cesium or strontium. Yes, the receptors do not lie, the apple is tasty, but an “unecological” context that has not been read (or cannot be read, because who carries a detector with them and checks everything?) has the same detrimental effect as slippery glass on a spider. Or even more banally persistent eternal chemicals, additives, flavors, etc. Only the devil knows all the relationships that unfold in the cycle and circulation of artificial xenobiotic substances. Yes, we have created elegant engineering systems, financial systems, we operate complex telescopes, spacecraft, perform photolithographic printing and cell immobilization that is understandable even to children, but complex. But we do not understand ABSOLUTELY how substances behave in all the complexity of the surrounding world, how they interact with the organism and nature, how they affect the climate and microbiomes. We are the masters of the same macroprocesses for which we evolved (and also microprocesses, with simple cause-and-effect relationships, using tools such as microscopes, scanners and other detection devices. In essence, transferring the macroscale to the microworld). But this is not the case with regard to the broader reality. It is not only biological processes or physical interactions that are difficult to describe and model. ALL processes are difficult to model. And the contexts we create are so "dumb" that they do not include in their basis the full complexity of interactions, essentially causing unpredictable consequences. And it's one thing to work with stone, nettles and bamboo, and quite another to work with a xenobiotic pool of substances and materials. The consequences are recorded and highlighted every month under the headlines: "Scientists have discovered that…"
We are brilliant in our nothingness.
Tom,
From the topics that you write about and the thoughts that you express, I would say that you have never read or studied A Course In Miracles. You should.
Larry
This frenetic, energy -guzzling civilisation is obviously ephemeral . When the sequestered energy store is depleted, the biosphere is fragmented, the wonderland that once existed on this planet is tattered remnants of it's former glory, the devastated landscapes where the giant mines wrought their havoc are finally quiet, the climate is inhospitable to most of the remaining life, it will be obvious to even the current deluded tech crazies that our ecological context was to live within the energy constraints of the solar energy flow, with the autotrophs , self-replicating and not requiring human mining and manufacturing for their existence, supplying the energy for our life on Earth.
I don't know whether it's ironic—or just good news—that when it finally becomes obvious that ecology wins, deluded tech crazies will be long gone. It is therefore hard to know whether to be happy or sad that they will carry their delusions into the dirt, without ever having gained the faintest inkling of their gross ignorance. Oh well: that will be the way of things, I believe.
Hi Tom
Thank you for this post and your job in general.
About the longterm "error" of agriculture, for example the Bible is full of references pointing in that direction in a subtle way, for example the condemnation of expulsion from Eden-Paradise:
"Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken. He drove out the man; and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life"
To "till the ground" is the consquence of to be expelled from Paradise, because "they ate the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge"!, so the future of human race will be one of toil and sweat for all the eternity may be for "knowing too much" and to be separate from Nature.
In the story of Cain and Abel, Cain is the farmer, and Abel is cattle breeder but we can interpret as more close to forragers nomads, and God was more pleased by the Abel's offers than those of Cain, and finally jealous Cain murdered Abel, and the anthropological records show that the first massacres found took place in Neolithic population centers of farmers, not before.
Cain was who built the first city: Enoch, the same name of one of his sons.
May be this is not only a myth but a remembered story about past disastrous cataclysm due to the "excess of knowledge" (as is our modern Science), and if you look in the megalithic records, we could start to think that there were others quite advanced civilizations, in the distant past, that dissapear all of them in a cataclism; may be the Younger Dryas, or may be what sparked the cataclism was this ancient civilization by itself.
Other puzzling issues about those megalithic sites is the lack of any images, drawig, texts, etc…They are completely mute. all of them, as if someone try to erase all the footprints of this (damned) world, may be in the distant future there will be a similar "blow back" against the way our civilization was made, may be a blow back against Science, and the "hybris" produced by it.
I include links to some videos of the mysteries around those megalithic sites in many parts of the world and how difficult is to explain them with the main-stream account of the development of civilizations in the past :
Lebanon:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFA7vf1Z2vQ
China:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZi4sIMhad8
Japan:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJb58oTNly0
Cheers
David