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lizbethrose wrote:Entschuldigen Sie, bitte. I use figurative language because it helps me understand concepts. My concept of the function of white blood cells as 'soldier' or 'defender' allows me to understand how the body fights off diseases caused by germs and viruses. Your use of 'housekeeper' engenders an image of a putzfrau sweeping up detritus.
Whatever. My statements about fear come from a study I did about 5 years ago on the function of the amygdala in human emotions. The study didn't rely on just internet citations, so I'm afraid I can't give you a single url. You might try 'functions of the amygdala' as a start.
lizbethrose wrote:Adults among the 5 big cats are at the top of their food chain and have few, if any, natural predators. Hyenas are scavengers. A lion may be killed by another lion, particularly in territorial battles, but the only other 'natural enemy' i know of would be a poisonous snake--and snakes often strike out of fear. I believed I mentioned loss of habitat as a major threat to the big cats of the world.
lizbethrose wrote:But your thread is about knowing and knowledge. I've said that fear is the basic emotion--fear is instinctive. An animal with instinctive fear 'knows' when it's in danger. A fawn will use its coloration--to blend into the background--in an effort to avoid the danger. The fawn has been taught to do so by its mother--so the doe is passing on knowledge to the next generation. (An aside: Zebras have stripes that resemble heat waves rising from the grasslands--that's their defensive coloration. Interesting, no?) The female is usually the one who passes on knowledge to her children, thus it becomes 'lore.' (Another aside: The Brothers Grimm published their first book under the title, Kinder- und Hausmärchen (Children's and Household Tales). The folklore they published was taken from often centuries-old oral tradition that had been passed down from mothers to their children.)
lizbethrose wrote:Whatever, again. At what point in evolution did knowledge become intelligence? Shoot! I have no idea--when the brain had evolved sufficiently to be able to anticipate something other than danger? Or did intelligence result from curiosity? Maybe it's the result of both? I really don't know enough about pre-history to be able to say. Somewhere along the line, pre-man--homo erectus, homo neanderthalus-- learned that attaching a stone to a stick kept him relatively safe while hunting. Somewhere along the line, he learned that bashing in your enemy's head worked better than simply throwing stones at him. Of course, you had to get close enough to him to be able to bash his head in, so how do you get around that little detail?--maybe by throwing stones at him. Whatever works, right?
lizbethrose wrote:Which is another aspect of knowledge and, possibly, intelligence. If something works (empirical 'proof'), then use it; at least, until something better comes along.
Evolution, as you know, is a very, very slow process that involves a lot of trial and error. But there was an explosion of human creativity during the Neolithic period--the New Stone age--as opposed to the Old Stone age--the Paleolithic--which saw a moderate rise in human technology. If it is shown to be true that neolithic man was able to sail from the northern shores of the Mediterranean and then go island hopping as far as what's now the near east, their use of tools had developed for beyond the original intent for tools. But that may only be the release of scientific 'discovery' before it could be fully tested and given peer review. It happens.
Mowk wrote:
Was there a report associated with this study? Is this report cross referenced with resources drawn from? You could possibly submit it as reference. From a brief survey of the information presented on the wiki page for the Amygdalae there are two of them. And there is mention of hemispherical specialization. The right amygdala has been associated to processing fear and when electrically stimulated produces fear and anxiety, however the left amygdala is also capable when stimulated of producing either pleasant or unpleasant anxiety fear or sadness responses. If this is the case it supports the presence of both fear and pleasure as motivators of behavior. Yin and Yang showed up at the party together. The other interesting mention was that the structure is present in complex vertebrates. So how did you get from complex vertebrates to all living cells, regardless complexity or even the presence of a vertebra?
That statement regarding attaching a stone to a stick keeping them relatively safe when hunting is a strange comment. It is perhaps a misnomer to consider an ax as a tool specialized for hunting. I'd guess when hunting they'd leave their ax at camp and take a tool designed more for long distance killing like a spear. I'd fathom a guess that a rock attached to a stick didn't keep anyone relatively safe at least not directly. With the ax they could manipulate their environment to a greater degree and that lead to building structures that actually did keep them safer, but not during the hunt. If safety during hunting was a pressure it was likely improved by hunting in groups and not carrying an ax. Odd how smoothly you transition from hunting, to bashing in the heads of other human enemies. I don't assume any other human is an enemy why would they? I don't believe I was born with an instinctual fear of other humans. I tend to think the opposite. That while the mechanism to feel fear maybe instinctual like setting an alarm. What that alarm goes off to is based on the experience of the individual. We tend to teach the fear of other human beings, I don't think it is instinctual.
I came upon a set of twin fawns while walking in the woods a few springs ago. I was nearly on top of them before I noticed them. One fawn must have been very hungry, for as soon as I showed up, it rose rather wobbly to its feet, took two steps, and attempted to suckle from my belly. I didn't feel real comfortable with the thought of it's mother being near, so I left in a hurry. The damn fawn attempted to follow me, and I didn't know what in dear speak meant stay. So I used violent motion in attempt to scare it away. That didn't have the affect I intended either. So I am unsure of the whole line of reasoning that fear of a specific trigger is instinctual, as in we 'know' by instinct what is a danger. I'm guessing that when doe and fawn got back together there were a few lessons taking place.
I don't think I suggested that through evolution, knowledge became intelligence. What I suggested was that perhaps the mutation of a non-plastic cell into one which was plastic provides support for adaptation. One such adaptation was that of anticipation. I do not think that all cells have the capacity to anticipate. Which is why I am arguing that fear is not the prime agent responsible for evolution. The first cells that evolved did not have fear as a response mechanism to guide them. Fear as a response, evolved much later in the evolutionary process. As fear evolved much later in the process it can not be the primary agent of evolution. The very capacity for cells to mutate seems a more reasonable primary agent.
lizbethrose wrote:Knowing and whether or not we 'know' things is somewhat instinctual.
Mowk wrote:lizbethrose wrote:Knowing and whether or not we 'know' things is somewhat instinctual.
So I asked what is instinctual?
And you reply with information that you state is neither instinctive nor intuitive. What does an autonomic reflex have to do with knowing?
And maybe what it is to "'"'"'know'"'"'"?
Mowk wrote:In reading over and consideration I wonder the role of what is thought of as 'wisdom' within all of this.
lizbethrose wrote:Some people would question both statements--what does it mean to 'know' something; what does it mean to 'experience' something; what does it mean to 'believe' something?--and so on. The only way I can answer is by saying--I hold an image in my memory of what I believe (or what I've learned) are the ingredients that make up a lovely Spring day. Temperatures in the mid-50s, sunshine, flowers starting to bloom--these are the components of what I've labeled a "lovely Spring day." Other people may think differently, but I'm not concerned with that. I'm not concerned because I'm alone in my mind, which is how I experience things. My mind--all of the millions of neuronal sparks and pathways that act instantaneously and in concert--is unique to me and only me. No one processes input the way I do--no one can, because no one has my memories, my sensations, my genetic background/make-up, my "self.
dan25 wrote:Certain knowledge ('knowing for a fact') does not exist,
only belief...
The concept of certain knowledge exists, as does the
concept of unicorns, or fire-breathing dragons.
quetzalcoatl wrote:Everything contains information
quetzalcoatl wrote: knowing derives from

dan25 wrote:Certain knowledge ('knowing for a fact') does not exist,
only belief...
The concept of certain knowledge exists, as does the
concept of unicorns, or fire-breathing dragons.
There is a lot of implicit and explicit knowledge presented here as certain. The asserted implicit knowledge would like be your epistemological beliefs, including beliefs, I would guess about perception, knowledge, and likely including beliefs about what I would call metaphysics, perhaps drawn from scientific theories.dan25 wrote:Certain knowledge ('knowing for a fact') does not exist,
only belief...
The concept of certain knowledge exists, as does the
concept of unicorns, or fire-breathing dragons.
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