I would also like to think that I would be more guided by the intuitive chemistry of falling in love, rather than by the various material and non-material benefits a prospective partner might bring into my life.
Barry said:The point about natural selection is the survival of species,
I think evolution tends towards optimal compromise, lowest cost/benefit ratio. No advertising of health may mean least energy expenditure, but no use at all if all the females ignore you; absurdly energy-expensive mating show may have them flocking, but if you drop dead from exhaustion before the vinegar stroke it's not much use for the species ... let alone the individual. The very fact these behaviours are here for us to witness today, is proof of their successful track record over the millennia. So evolution has likely homed in on a good approximation to the best cost/benefit ratio.But how would the females know which peacocks are fit and healthy, unless they have some way of gauging that? The peacock's plumage provides a gauge of heath, so that makes it useful. But agreed that it is a bit of clumsy and energetically expensive way of sending a signal of health. Maybe there are better signals used in other animal species.
I saw this amazing documentary about bowerbirds, which decorate their nest with any type of blue item, in order to impress the female. See some bowerbird nest pictures here. Hard to figure out how such a practice started, but one might speculate it could be a measure of eyesight acuity (since blue items are rare in the natural environment, and thus hard to find).
I think there is a reason why two human beings are attracted sexually, and I think the reason is good match of genes.
There are other ways to assess condition (call loudness, quality of territory held) but if males didn't use their trains, they wouldn't be peacocks.But how would the females know which peacocks are fit and healthy, unless they have some way of gauging that?
At times it is profoundly unintelligent!My point is only that sexual selection is not an intelligent process.
My point is only that sexual selection is not an intelligent process.
Why would there be any need for intelligence? They don't think it through cognitively; it is far more likely instinctive behaviour, pre-programmed at a very low level.If there were no intelligence involved, why would animals have complex courtship rituals, which determine who gets to reproduce, and who does not?
They don't think it through cognitively; it is far more likely instinctive behaviour, pre-programmed at a very low level.
That is fair comment. But my point was there doesn't necessarily have to be intelligence involved, which is distinct from whether it might - or might not - also be a contributing factor.I think that is underestimating animal intelligence. Have you ever seen how crows solve problems with astounding cognitive and preplanning-type thought and intelligence, as demonstrated in this video of a crow dropping stones into water in a glass tube to raise the water level in order to be able to grasp an out of reach piece of food?
If animals can think cognitively about food, then there is no reason to suppose they don't think equally cognitively when choosing a sexual partner.
But my point was there doesn't necessarily have to be intelligence involved, which is distinct from whether it might - or might not - also be a contributing factor.
Animals May 'Fake' Being Healthy To Woo Mates, Study Suggests
When humans and animals fall ill, they typically exhibit a range of so-called “sickness behaviors”: They may eat and drink less, move less, sleep more, and feel a decreased desire to socialize, explore or have sex. By conserving energy on what’s considered non-essential activities, like pleasurable sex, the animal’s body can focus on healing its immune system, some scientists hypothesize.
But the new review suggests animals don’t always act this way: In one study, male zebra finches who had immune problems acted as if they were healthy when confronted with the stimulating possibility of sex with a female zebra finch. Despite being infected, the male zebra finches courted in the normal fashion.
In another study, zebra finches housed with many other birds exhibited fewer sickness behaviors, even though their immune systems showed signs of inflammation. Scientists observed the same phenomenon in male rats housed in groups.
Study researcher Patricia Lopes, a biologist at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, said that these social contexts may motivate animals to hide their sickness so they can maintain social status.
Researchers have thought “that behaving sick helps animals recover from the disease, and so this should be the default way to behave when sick,” Lopes said in a press release. “However, if being sick coincides with, for example, a unique opportunity to mate, then animals may adjust their priorities and behave as though they are not sick.”
Remember that this all began when you asserted that evolution had purpose and design?If there were no intelligence involved......
andDarwinian evolution is also guided by intelligent decision-making in higher creatures with brains (sexual selection), which is purposeful rather than random. So in higher creatures, there is intelligence driving a purposeful course of evolution.
You seem to be confusing the intelligence of animals with the intelligence of a process. Intelligence is no more integral to evolution by sexual selection than it is to evolution by natural selection. The intelligence of animals often helps them to avoid being eaten. That does not mean that intelligence drives evolution. Quite the opposite. Intelligence is just one of the characteristics on which natural selection acts.Sexual selection brings intelligence into evolution.
Even though it would not cure the illness, it may provide a bit of distraction therapyI can imagine psychiatrists devising a new treatment for ME/CFS, involving surrounding ME/CFS patients with lustful nymphomaniacs, in the hope that the stimulating possibilities of sex will make us hide our sickness behaviors, and cure our illness!
Even though it would not cure the illness, it may provide a bit of distraction therapy
You seem to be confusing the intelligence of animals with the intelligence of a process. Intelligence is no more integral to evolution by sexual selection than it is to evolution by natural selection. The intelligence of animals often helps them to avoid being eaten. That does not mean that intelligence drives evolution.
We've all got it tough, but being in Germany, that's probably the toughest gig of all! All those neo-Freudians.I was told my bodily symptoms resulted from a hidden, underlying conflict that could only be resolved with psychotherapy. (And again, something I know from religion.) I wondered why this could only be achieved by a psychotherapist, why he can unfold my inner mysteries - and I cannot? I think of myself as being reflective. Second, this assumption cannot be proven (and it cannot not be proven).
How will I know I resolved THE ONE conflict?
How will I know this conflict is really connected to the symptoms?
What if in psychotherapy the seemingly conflict was resolved, but the bodily symptoms remain?
What if the symptoms disappear, but the seemingly conflict does not?
What if it is thought that the conflict was resolved, the symptoms disappeared, and after a time they return? Is there a new conflict or wasn't THE ONE conflict resolved?
How will I know the therapist knows?
as demonstrated in this video of a crow dropping stones into water in a glass tube to raise the water level in order to be able to grasp an out of reach piece of food?
there is no reason why animals might not also employ their cognitive intelligence in their choice of mate.
Is the evolution of civilisation analogous to biological evolution? It certainly isn't encoded in our genetic material but then neither is any learned behaviour. But the capacity to learn is and we already had the genetic capacity for modern civilisation 10,000 years ago.Take the example of the evolution of human civilization.