Originally posted by Xin Yu
I understand that, since cockroaches can survive under any environment, they do not need to learn (changing of environment has no effect on them). But for any other species, learning should be very important. Why only human beings have the ability to learn?
I understand that, since cockroaches can survive under any environment, they do not need to learn (changing of environment has no effect on them). But for any other species, learning should be very important. Why only human beings have the ability to learn?
There is plenty of time to adapt to changes in such a long period of time.
Not to mention that you're blatantly wrong in thinking that only humans can learn. There are just limitations as to what exactly species can learn. There may be few species that can actually learn human language to a limited degree and I suppose we're the only ones able to learn quantum physics, but that's not all we learn.
An observed group of Japanese macaques started taking dips in a hot spring in the 60's and they've been doing it ever since. Chimps use sticks to eat ants. Parrots can talk (well, obviously only mimic sounds a bit, but that's enough to show they learn, isn't it).
I recently saw an episode of Myth Busters where they experimented that fish can learn to associate a color with food.
What exactly do you consider learning?
I picture evolution using an analogy: high-level computer languages. At first there is language A, then B, then C (including C++
, and so on, just like environment changes. (...)

That makes no sense.
If the above picture is correct, then sooner or later all species (except cockroaches) will know that learning is the key to survive. They will develop the ability to learn as a result of evolution. But they didn't. Hence evolution theory is not correct.
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