Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Seth wrote:Which doesn't explain why monkeys don't have human intelligence, don't walk upright, or why sharks don't have large brains and swim bladders, etc.
Neither does it explain why porcupines don't come equipped with ironing boards. Perhaps they just never needed them.

And yet human beings evolved from the same "common ancestor" and clearly "needed them." So why is the adaptation so beneficial to humans not seen in monkeys?
Evolution marches on, right? All organisms are continuously evolving through a series of small changes, correct?
True.
But what are they evolving into?
Something marginally more suited to their environment.
And yet humans evolved in the same environment, and indeed largely in the same place as other primates, so why didn't each species continue to evolve along roughly the same lines? Are the genetic adaptations that resulted in humans not also useful to chimpanzees?
Where is the transitional form between gorillas and humans that ought to exist if gorillas are evolving? Why are gorillas not becoming more like humans?
Why would a gorilla need to evolve into a human or anything like a human?
Why wouldn't it? Clearly we are better adapted for survival than the gorilla is, which is why there are lots of us and few of them. Why would evolutionary pressure not force them towards higher intelligence and other adaptations that would make them better able to survive, as we have?
Why do you insist that evolution has a direction, a plan?
I don't. I merely pose the question of why, when they both existed in the same general environment for hundreds of thousands or millions of years, did gorillas not advance more quickly towards human-like intelligence than they have? Were the evolutionary pressures substantially different? Why did humans evolve a more complex brain and upright gait, and language, while gorillas did not?
Gorillas did OK where they were without a bigger brain, so they haven't evolved one. Simple.
Not sufficient. This is circular logic. Hominids "did OK" where they were, and yet they did develop bigger brains. Why?
Why do not the various branches from our "common ancestor" themselves evolve towards greater intelligence? Clearly humans have the evolutionary advantage here, so why haven't evolutionary pressures guided chimpanzees towards an erect posture and human intelligence?
Why do you assume that greater intelligence is necessarily an advantage to all species?
Why do you assume it's not?
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