I never said that humans are smartEST just smartER.
Also, why only stop at ancient egypt? that was only 10 or 20 thousand years ago, and those humans were clever enough to obey orders, live in a society, speak fluently, buy, sell and trade, understand concepts like law and property, commerce and markets, build complicated structures to live in, express themselves in some way or another?
So, first. Ancient Egypt was around 8,000 years ago, and was one of the largest early large-scale civilizations. Humans have not changed very much in the last 8,000 years. Evolution takes a very long time. My point here, is that you can't say whether an elephant is capable of understanding that stuff. Furthermore, if you mean Smarter, not smartest, what is the smartest? You've been saying there's an order of magnitude of difference. But TECHNOLOGY is different from INTELLIGENCE. You can teach technology. You cannot teach intelligence.
They were all able to consider their own destiny, life, situation etc. and had self-awareness (albeit, not as much as, for example, Buddha)
Self-Awareness is not a merely inherited trait: we inherit the hardware only, the software which makes use of it is memetically passed on, for example, through society, parents and family.
Keep going back a couple of 100 thousand years and you'll see what makes humans SO different from animals:
-tool use + tool creation (logic and abstract problem solving)
-fishing and agriculture (time, seasons, plant biology)
-complex tribal society, primitive language, body language (social complexity)
-reflection/meditation, worship, mysticism or shamanism (trance, concentration)
-mastered fire (understanding, overcoming fear and danger)
-drawings in ochre, creation of accessories such as necklaces, rudimentary clothing (art, creativity)
-medicine, drugs, rituals (biology, psychology)
Thumbs. Other animals use tools as well, and I agree that we're far better at using tools than any other animal. That's not a matter of intelligence necessarily. Fishing and Agriculture are a form of tool use, and a form of pattern recognition, which status-game creatures are pretty good at. I can't think of a single species that doesn't communicate in part via body language, and tribal society is not all that different from pack society save in that there's technology which enables specialized roles.
What would you use to see if an animal could worship or meditate? The basis of it is pattern recognition and storytelling, it doesn't arise spontaneously from nothing. We do have very powerful brains. We are quite probably the smartest animals on the planet. There is, however, a comparison.
Fire is also thumbs. Cooking is actually what let us get as smart as we are, with less energy devoted to digesting food. It's pretty great.
Aesthetics is an interesting thing to look at. Mostly tools, though, far as I know. Though from what I remember apes will decorate themselves if they have the stuff to do it.
Again, medicine is tech, not intelligence.[/quote]
How can anyone compare animals to humans? We've come so far, and we'll go even further. Humans are made of meditation and tantra.
What the hell does that even mean? We aren't, I can guarantee you we aren't made of either of those things.
Here's what wikipedia has to say about human brains versus apes
Encephalization
Brain size and tooth size in hominins.
The human species developed a much larger brain than that of other primates—typically 1,330 cm3 in modern humans, over twice the size of that of a chimpanzee or gorilla.[71] The pattern of encephalization started with Homo habilis,[72] which at approximately 600 cm3 had a brain slightly larger than that of chimpanzees, and continued with Homo erectus (800–1,100 cm3), reaching a maximum in Neanderthals with an average size of (1,200–1,900 cm3), larger even than Homo sapiens. The pattern of human postnatal brain growth differs from that of other apes (heterochrony) and allows for extended periods of social learning and language acquisition in juvenile humans. However, the differences between the structure of human brains and those of other apes may be even more significant than differences in size.[73][74][75][76]
The increase in volume over time has affected areas within the brain unequally—the temporal lobes, which contain centers for language processing, have increased disproportionately, and seems to favor a belief that there was evolution after leaving Africa, as has the prefrontal cortex which has been related to complex decision-making and moderating social behavior.[71] Encephalization has been tied to an increasing emphasis on meat in the diet,[77][78][79] or with the development of cooking,[80] and it has been proposed that intelligence increased as a response to an increased necessity for solving social problems as human society became more complex.[81] The human brain was able to expand because of the changes in the morphology of smaller mandibles and mandible muscle attachments to the skull into allowing more room for the brain to grow.[82]
The increase in volume of the neocortex also included a rapid increase in size of the cerebellum. Traditionally the cerebellum has been associated with a paleocerebellum and archicerebellum as well as a neocerebellum. Its function has also traditionally been associated with balance, fine motor control but more recently speech and cognition. The great apes including humans and its antecessors had a more pronounced development of the cerebellum relative to the neocortex than other primates. It has been suggested that because of its function of sensory-motor control and assisting in learning complex muscular action sequences, the cerebellum may have underpinned the evolution of human's technological adaptations including the preadaptation of speech.[83][84][85][86]
The reason for this encephalization is difficult to discern, as the major changes from Homo erectus to Homo heidelbergensis were not associated with major changes in technology. It has been suggested that the changes have been associated with social changes, increased empathic abilities[87][88] and increases in size of social groupings[89][90][91]
tldr: human brains are twice the size of gorilla or chimpanzee brains and specially developed for exploratory intelligence, not just problem solving some random shit they happen to come across.
Although everyone is quite right that animals have feelings, consciousness, thoughts, etc. there is just no comparison between them and humans.
They lack the WETWARE.
Okay? There's still quite a comparison to be made. I mean literally you can compare them, it's called the encephalization quotient. Yes, humans have the largest. There's still a comparison. We're not super-beings far and away superior to all other life on this planet. Like, dude, you keep shifting the goalposts, but there really is, in fact, a comparison. A lot of the shit we like comes from status-games. Intelligence makes you better at status games. Being better at status games and appearing to have a higher reproductive fitness makes mates more likely to desire you, and makes you more likely to have more kids. That does not make us beyond comparison to animals. If you're wanting to compare like an insectoid 'hive mind' to humans, I'll agree, there's no real comparison. But dogs can reach the intelligence of somewhere around a four-year-old. And they're pretty good at some surprising stuff. And that's from a dog, not a dolphin or a chimpanzee.