COMPLEXITY EXPLAINED: 16. Evolution of Intelligence and Consciousness

Thanks to Bala for the link.
Original link

The human brain is a physical organ, governed by the laws of physics. The mind is ‘brain power,’ or the capacity of the brain to feel, think, and reason. The brain carries the mind, as well as what we often call consciousness (although we cannot tell where exactly in the brain is the so-called consciousness located). Our intelligence may be no different from ’swarm intelligence,’ the swarm here being that of neurons. There is a belief that the transition from intelligence to consciousness needs the acquisition of a human language. The ’society of mind’ (comprising of ‘communities’ of large numbers of interacting neurons) emerged as a hierarchical structure, so typical of any complex adaptive system. Consciousness is an emergent phenomenon.

16.1 Evolution of the Mammalian Brain

Any living entity exploits the existing structure and order of its surroundings to ensure its survival and reproduction. Consider a single-celled organism in a pond. On its surface are molecules which can ‘detect’ (are influenced by) the presence of nutrients. There is usually a gradient of the nutrient concentration, so that it is higher on one side of the organism than on the other. The single-celled organism has chemical sensors which can detect this gradient. Biological evolution has programmed it to propel itself in the direction of increasing concentration of nutrient. An attribute of intelligence is the problem-solving capacity of the system; other important attributes are prediction and memory capabilities. As Hawkins (2004) points out, both prediction and memory are involved here. The prediction is that, by moving in the direction of increasing concentration of nutrient, more nutrient will be found. This is not something the organism has ‘learnt’ and ‘remembered’ in its lifetime. The memory, evolved over many generations of evolution, is in its DNA.

To cut a long evolutionary story short, let us jump from bacteria to plants. Plants also exploit the existing order and structure (constancy or sameness over reasonably long time scales) by employing memory and prediction. The memory in the genes of a tree tells it that it will find greater sunshine by sending its branches and leaves towards the sky. And that it will find water and minerals by sending its roots down into the soil. These actions are automatic, and there is no ‘thinking’ involved, just as there is no thinking involved in the actions of a bacterium.
...
Continue reading

TAGGED: EVOLUTION


RELATED CONTENT

The Descent of Edward Wilson

Richard Dawkins - Prospect 7 Comments

Richard Dawkins's review of The Social Conquest of Earth, by Edward O Wilson (WW Norton, £18.99, May)

Ancient walking mystery deepens

Helen Briggs - BBC News - Science &... 7 Comments

One of the first creatures to step on land could not have walked on four legs, 3D computer models show.

Human Races May Have Biological...

Razib Khan - The Crux - Discover... 89 Comments

Human Races May Have Biological Meaning, But Races Mean Nothing About Humanity

Darwinian Selection Continues to...

- - ScienceDaily 45 Comments

New evidence proves humans are continuing to evolve and that significant natural and sexual selection is still taking place in our species in the modern world.

Where's the Beef? Early Humans Took It

Ann Gibbons - Science - AAAS.org 7 Comments

Cool cats. The skull and jaw of two different species of extinct saber-toothed cats, which lived during the heyday of carnivores 3 million to 3.5 million years ago in the Turkana Basin of Kenya.


Credit: Lars Werdelin/© National Museums of Kenya

Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian...

- - ScienceDaily 29 Comments

Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian Lake Does Not Fit On Main Branches of Tree of Life

MORE

MORE BY VINOD K. WADHAWAN

Science and Scientists

Vinod K. Wadhawan - nirmukta.com 7 Comments

COMPLEXITY EXPLAINED: 17. Epilogue

Vinod K. Wadhawan - Nirmukta 5 Comments

COMPLEXITY EXPLAINED: 15. Evolution of...

Vinod K. Wadhawan - Nirmukta 1 Comments

COMPLEXITY EXPLAINED: 14. Biological...

Vinod K. Wadhawan - Nirmukta 3 Comments

Complexity Explained: 13. Evolution of...

Vinod K. Wadhawan - Nirmukta 15 Comments

COMPLEXITY EXPLAINED: 9. How Did...

Vinod K. Wadhawan - Nirmukta 32 Comments

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment