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So good.
One of the chief characteristics of domesticated animals is their reduced aggression compared to wild types. Tame dogs, cats, cattle and goats, are much more tolerant of others and more social than their feral versions. This acquired tameness is why we can work close with them. In addition, domestication brings morphological changes to the skulls of adults – they resemble the young more with larger wider eyes, smaller teeth, flatter rounder faces, and more slender bones. Tame dogs look like wolf puppies, and domesticated cats more like lion kittens.
Although wolves were domesticated into dogs in several regions of the world around 15 to 40 thousand years ago, they were not the first animals to be domesticated. We were. Homo sapiens may have been the first species to select for these genes. When anthropologists compare the morphological features of modern humans to our immediate ancestors like the Neanderthal and Denisovans, humans display neoteny. Humans resemble juvenile Neanderthal, with rounder falter faces, shorter jaws with smaller teeth, and slender bones. And in fact the differences between a modern human skull and a Neanderthal skull parallel those between a dog and its wild wolf ancestor.
We invented our humanity. We invented cooking, we invented human language, we invented our sense of fairness, duty, and responsibility. All these came intentionally, out our imaginations of what could be. To the fullest extent possible, all the traits that we call “human” in contrast to either “animal” or “nature,” are traits that we created for ourselves. We self-selected our character, and crafted this being called human. In a real sense we collectively chose to be human.
21 sats \ 2 replies \ @Dash_1971 8h
Arrogant atheistic nonsense. We are totally depraved creatures and cannot save ourselves with our own endeavor or ingenuity no matter how hard we try. We need Christ.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b OP 7h
fwiw kk is a Christian
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fabs 1h
Amen.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @fm 55m
We are self-domesticated apes
Gotta love McKenna theory
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I remember listening to Kevin Kelly on the Tim Ferriss Show it's got to have been around 10 years ago. Interesting dude with lots of interesting toughts.
Went looking and found it: https://tim.blog/2014/08/29/kevin-kelly/ Great stuff.
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Interesting read!
We invented our humanity. We invented cooking, we invented human language, we invented our sense of fairness, duty, and responsibility.
Invention suggests some kind of intentional and deliberate process. I prefer to think that language, cooperation, etc emerged from evolutionary pressure.
Fairness, reciprocity,... seems to exist in many other beings too. Of course, depends on where you put us humans versus primates, but it seems like chimpanzees and "less evolved" beings also have rudimentary concepts of fairness, etc.
So, I kinda agree with the general gist, but could be a bit more nuanced. At the same time, it's probably not meant to be super-hedged as would be the case for a peer-reviewed article~~
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @gmd 6h
Interesting read. I legit never thought or heard of this idea before.
Unfortunately the most domesticated among us are no longer reproducing!
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the genetic interference theory makes sense to me so far; epieugenics and genetic modification are still ongoing today.
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @IamSINGLE 8h
We're called humans but in reality we're one of the 5 great Apes.
The other 4 will follow our path once they invent a language with words.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fabs 1h
For that, they'd first need to evolve a few things which they simply won't be able to do, as they'll be extinct by then.
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