bascule Posted July 9, 2006 Posted July 9, 2006 http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5503685
ecoli Posted July 9, 2006 Posted July 9, 2006 My linguistics prof. would not be surprize. He spent all year trying to convince us that language is hard-wired into the brain.
silkworm Posted July 9, 2006 Posted July 9, 2006 Wow. That is awesome. Understanding the can, the use of the metaphor, and the story about the finger shows that other animals really are a hell of a lot more intelligent than many will give them credit for.
bascule Posted July 9, 2006 Author Posted July 9, 2006 ...shows that other animals really are a hell of a lot more intelligent than many will give them credit for. Yet sadly, wild bonobos are being driven into extinction.
silkworm Posted July 9, 2006 Posted July 9, 2006 Yet sadly, wild bonobos are being driven into extinction. Even more sad is that they are quite possibly our closest cousin (closer than the chimp (though I know there is a bit of a dispute about this)) Bascule, I just had an epiphany. A project for you and I. Arm the bonobos?
doG Posted July 10, 2006 Posted July 10, 2006 Even more sad is that they are quite possibly our closest cousin (closer than the chimp (though I know there is a bit of a dispute about this)) I seem to remember reading somewhere that Bonobos are the only species like humans that engage in sex for recreation, unlike chimps.
silkworm Posted July 10, 2006 Posted July 10, 2006 I seem to remember reading somewhere that Bonobos are the only species like humans that engage in sex for recreation, unlike chimps. Yes, in bonobos the women rule and they base their hierarchy and politics in sexual activity among the females.
AzurePhoenix Posted July 10, 2006 Posted July 10, 2006 I seem to remember reading somewhere that Bonobos are the only species like humans that engage in sex for recreation, unlike chimps. Well, dolphins do as well, but yes, bonobos are prolifically promiscuous, far more than humans even. And what's more, they're all sexual "deviants." Sex is a social lubricant keeping emotions cool and holding the troop together in place of the aggressive interactions of common chimps. Female to female, male to male, oral sex, incest, and all members of the tribe partake, from infancy to elderhood. I have read that the only real taboo is that males stop... "playing" with their moms when they hit young adulthood. Anyway, I wouldn't say the females really "rule" in the same sense that a warlord among chimps rules his troop. There is some social stratification and ranking, and females are higher up, but it's pretty lax, especially when food's easily available. I've always looked at bonobos as the hippy extreme, chimps as the 'militaristic' extreme, and humans as the middle-ground
SmallIsPower Posted July 10, 2006 Posted July 10, 2006 Bonobos aren't the only species that's more integent than we expected. To obtain out-of-reach food, the crow repeatedly took a piece of straight wire and bent it to create a hook. According to the researchers, who report their findings in the August 9, 2002 issue of Science, this behavior suggests that New Caledonian crows "rival nonhuman primates in tool-related cognitive capabilities." Tool makers with tiny brains!
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