• Notyou
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    14 days ago

    You seem to have knowledge. I read somewhere that cooking food helps break down the food so humans spend less calories absorbing the nutrients from it. The helps us conserve calories that helped lead to what you called the Big Brain Explosion.

    Do you know of this happening anywhere else in nature? Could we start some animals on a cooked food diet and measure any brain growth or behavior change? Am I just speaking gibberish?

      • Notyou
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        14 days ago

        One could argue our domesticated dogs eat more cooked food than wild dogs. Domesticated dogs learn tricks and wild dogs don’t therefore the cooked food might contribute to them learning tricks.

    • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      Well the rest of this is my own thinking. What this effectively does is free up calories. What happens with those extra calories depends on the evolutionary pressure. The species could just hunt/eat less and continue on just as they were, or they could switch to more secure or less dangerous foods. For most animals hunting is dangerous, so less hunting would be simply better. For humans, better (more intelligent) use of hunting tools lead to better survival, so the evolutionary pressure is bigger brain to better use tools. For a tiger, more calories could lead to bigger claws or something, or less hunting.

      I also think that intelligence depends on the ability to manipulate the environment around you. We have hands and fingers to make things, tools, houses, etc. However intelligent an elephant is, they can never really manipulate the environment around them to great extent. So their evolutionary pressure for bigger brains maxes out. There’s just no need. You see those cartoons about the super intelligent dolphin? Well I don’t think that would ever happen because they can never manipulate the environment round them.