Col. Hstar wrote:No they do not get accustomed to the noises, they are as you say trained. A trained horse can still get spooked. the fact that they are trained not to react to every noise does not show intelligence on the horse's part.
It does however show the intelligence of a human to be able to train them.
How do you know that we do not train ourselves to get used to these noises? Stick a native from the rain forest (who had little to no contact with modern society) and I'll guarantee that the person will not react differently from a another animal. We can train the individual to not get 'spooked'. That is what I was trying to convey in my previous post; when do we say that an organism becomes aware of the 'noise' and when it is trained?
Col. Hstar wrote:Yes adult chimps can be trained to use use tools the way a 3-4 year old can. But that's where it stops. Those chimps don't continue to learn more. They don't progress far enough to know how to build houses. also they don't learn this on their own. Again the credit lies not with a chimp, but with the [i]human[i] trainer. You could train a chimp to type on a keyboard. (believe me I think we have seen some post on this forum ) but they wouldn't go beyond their training and type out their own thoughts.
Wild chimps have been observed (had no human interaction) to use tools, they were not trained. How do you know if an organism stops learning? Modern humans have developed computers and cars, yet other humans who have been secluded from our modern society (again those who live in the rain forest) have not developed further apart from spears and simple survival skills. They did not learn further and therefore (by your argument) have a similar intelligence to chimps.
What does separate us from other animals is that we were able to efficiently share knowledge, much better than an animal (or chimp for that er). Chimps can learn but likely at a slower rate than us. The amusing thing is, we try to teach animals our language (way of communication), yet humans have difficulties learning theirs (the animals). Sure we know basic forms of what an animal may convey, but we do not fully understand their 'language' either. Maybe chimps do have their own thoughts, but do not express it in a way that we understand. We can not exactly know what an animal thinks unless we fully understand them, until then, we can not assume what they think or if they think. We base most of our conclusions from observations on the animals, what they do and how they react. A human will not behave much differently from an animal if they have been secluded from society/knowledge, but they will be able to learn much faster than a chimp, that I can guarantee. That is the major difference between us and other organisms.
Note: I only addressed your previous post that was about noises on animals directly. I do not disagree that humans are more intelligent than animals, but that we cannot fully differentiate when/where instincts, freewill, awareness, knowledge, and emotions occur on animals/organisms. When do we differentiate whether an animal has been trained or taught? We train children to do certain things yet we say 'they learned it'. Both humans and animals (whether trained or taught) are able to apply the new knowledge to their advantage (mostly).
Cheers
Yanoda