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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.

Some people think that intelligence is the crowning achievement of evolution. Well if

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