His answer is the octopus. What say you?

  • snooggums
    link
    English
    43 days ago

    Because it opens up doing so many different things that impact the world as a whole. Beavers instinctually damn moving water and build homes, but that has been their limited behavior for thousands of years. They don’t expand out and change things even more and more over time like humans do, because they don’t actively choose to do new things that continuously expand their impact.

    That intent and conscious decision making by humans to change the world around them is what makes them special.

    • kadup
      link
      English
      -1
      edit-2
      3 days ago

      deleted by creator

      • @idiomaddict
        link
        English
        12 days ago

        If the beavers banded together and tried to exterminate humanity, they wouldn’t get as far as humanity would exterminating beaverkind. That’s domination: exerting your will on those around you to their detriment and not being deterred by their resistance, no?

        I don’t think that’s a fun competition or nice thing to consider, but there are few animals that could come close to beating us in that regard. Ants, termites, and bees are the first that come to mind for me, but there are probably other possibilities.

        Plants, fungi, and bacteria on the other hand… I don’t think we could really expect to win against the most ubiquitous examples of those.

      • snooggums
        link
        English
        33 days ago

        Now explain why somehow our most important trait makes us dominant from a biological point of view.

        It allows us to accomplish far more than would normally occur based on our biological limitations.

        Your problem is trying to argue based on an academic definition (that is not universally defined) against the common usage of the word dominant and doing a piss poor job of making that clear. Like when someone uses the lay version of theory and then arguing against it based on the scientific definition of theory without making it clear which one you are using.

        • kadup
          link
          English
          -23 days ago

          deleted by creator

          • snooggums
            link
            English
            23 days ago

            You could read the article for their definition of dominant and use it like the rest of us are.

            • kadup
              link
              English
              -13 days ago

              Sure, if my goal was to entertain their proposed definition.

              My goal was instead commenting that this might be a fun endeavor for some, but remind everybody else that might not be familiar with biological sciences that this isn’t actually a formal definition or a scientific claim that one species is or isn’t dominant.