Mr Chris wrote:
MaliA wrote:
I didn't do that sort of stuff, that's big animals, is that.
Best excuse to Social Services ever.
EoaE - I do wonder why it is that many sorts of animals will have a lot of genetically determined behaviours, and we seem to almost entirely rely on memes (in the original sense) for most behaviours. You take a human child and keep it in a box for several years, what comes out is a psychopath. But, I guess, a psychopath that knows food goes in its mouth.
So we
do have genetically determined behaviours which do not need learning, but I guess as we have a much larger spread of behaviour types, most of ours are learned. If we didn't have language and iPods and that, we'd be no different to squirrels.
One major factor - conceivably a deciding one, though I know too little to say authoritatatitatively - is that humans are born extremely early on as a result of our large brain size to body size ratio. Human infants are utterly helpless and know nothing but to scream at pretty much every stimulus. Most mammals are born much more developed, including other primates. That's largely why/because we're so gregarious - we've had to be, to raise our spawn effectively - and also why upbringing has such a profound effect on humans when compared to other species.
Relatedly, the last century has seen surgical intervention become all but guaranteed in childbirth in many countries (notably the USA, where arbitrary pointless procedures mean arbitrary pointless purchases for the hospital's owner). So, babies' heads are getting larger, but thanks to this intervention, womens' hips aren't getting any wider. Uh oh!