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Some people think that intelligence is the crowning achievement of evolution. Well if
that's true there should be more intelligent creatures on the planet Earth. But to the
best of our knowledge we're the only ones. The dinosaurs were on the Earth for roughly
200 million years and to the best of our knowledge not a single dinosaur became intelligent.
We humans, modern humans, had been on the Earth for roughly a hundred thousand years.
Only a tiny fraction of the 4.5 billion years that the Earth has been around. So you come
to the rather astounding conclusion that intelligence is not really necessary. That Mother Nature
has done perfectly well with non-intelligent creatures for millions of years and that we
as intelligent creatures are the new kid on the block.
And so then you begin to wonder how did we become intelligent? What separated us from
the animals? Well there are basically three ingredients -- at least three that help to
propel us to become intelligent. One is the opposable thumb. You need a tentacle, a claw,
an opposable thumb in order to manipulate the environment. So that's one of the ingredients
of intelligence -- to be able to change the world around you.
Second is eyesight. But the eyesight of a predator. We have eyes to the front of our
face, not to the side of our face and why? Animals with eyes to the front of their face
are predators -- lions, tigers and foxes. Animals with eyes to the side of their face
are prey and they are not as intelligent -- like a rabbit. We say dumb bunny and smart as a
fox. And there's a reason for that. Because the fox is a predator. It has to learn how
to ambush. It has to learn how to have stealth, camouflage. It has to psych out the enemy
and anticipate the motion of the enemy that is its prey. If you're a dumb bunny all you
have to do is run. And the third basic ingredient is language because you have to be able to
communicate your knowledge to the next generation.
And to the best of our knowledge animals do not communicate knowledge to their offspring
other than by simply communicating certain primitive motions. There's no book. There's
no language. There's no culture by which animals can communicate their knowledge to the next
generation. And so we think that's how the brain evolved. We have an opposable thumb,
we have a language of maybe five to ten thousand words. And we have eyesight that is stereo
eyesight -- the eyesight of a predator. And predators seem to be smarter than prey. Then
you ask another question. How many animals on the Earth satisfy these three basic ingredients.
And then you come to the astounding conclusion -- the answer is almost none. So perhaps there's
a reason why we became intelligent and the other animals did not. They did not have the
basic ingredients that would one day propel us to become intelligent.
Then the next question asked in Planet of the Apes and asked in any number of science
fiction movies is can you accentuate intelligence. Can you take an ape and make the ape intelligent.
Well, believe it or not the answer could be yes. We are 98.5 percent genetically equivalent
to a chimpanzee. Only a handful of genes separate us from the chimps and yet we live twice as
long and we have thousands of words in our vocabulary. Chimps can have maybe just a few
hundred. And we've isolated many of those genes that separate us from the chimpanzees.
For example the ASP gene governs the size of the crane, cranial capacity so that by
monkeying with just one gene you can literally double the size of the brain case and the
brain itself.
And so in the future -- not today but in the future we may use gene therapy to begin the
process of making perhaps a chimpanzee intelligent. We know the genes that'll increase the size
of the brain. We've isolated now the genes that give you manual dexterity by which you
can make tools. We have found the genes which give you the ability to articulate thousands
of words. And so it may be possible to tinker with the genome of a chimpanzee so that they
have a larger brain case, they have better manual dexterity and they have the ability
to articulate a larger vocabulary. But then what do you get? You get a primate that looks
very similar to a human. And so my personal attitude is why bother. We already have humans,
just look outside the door.
So why bother to manipulate a chimpanzee because as you make a chimpanzee more and more intelligent
it becomes more and more humanlike with a vocabulary, with vocal chords, with manual
dexterity, with a larger brain case and a spine to support a larger brain case. That's
called a human.