ZoologyMajor
100% Addicted
Otters and elephants also use tools.
Man is an animal. There is no separating them.
As far as us writing goes:
1) Most animals don't have the needed appendages to write.
2) Maybe they just don't feel the need to do so. I believe that humans have wants and desires that differ greatly than from what other animals want and desire.
3) We did not always write. Writing is also just another learned behavior.
4) Many animals have such a highly evolved social structure there is no need for writing. Elephants for example pass info down from generation to generation. They also use sound that humans can't hear (can be picked up by instruments) to communicate over long distances. So they were basically making long distance phone calls before we ever even thought up the idea of a telephone.
They are pretty simple critters, but anything with a brain has some kind of intelligence. The reptilian part of the brain is where we get our most basic emotions from after all.
People have long said "*This* is what separates man from animal" only to have it disproved later (things like tool use, culture, etc.). There isn't one thing that clearly marks the point between man and animal. It is all a matter of degrees. A crow can make a tool out of a stick or paperclip, but man can make a rocket to the moon.
Man is an animal. There is no separating them.
As far as us writing goes:
1) Most animals don't have the needed appendages to write.
2) Maybe they just don't feel the need to do so. I believe that humans have wants and desires that differ greatly than from what other animals want and desire.
3) We did not always write. Writing is also just another learned behavior.
4) Many animals have such a highly evolved social structure there is no need for writing. Elephants for example pass info down from generation to generation. They also use sound that humans can't hear (can be picked up by instruments) to communicate over long distances. So they were basically making long distance phone calls before we ever even thought up the idea of a telephone.