rotting bones wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 2:17 am
keenir wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 1:06 am
I'm not sure I understand your use of "randos"...at least not when referring to orangs. (though i'd wager that it was a larger orang taking food from a smaller one)
It's usually long-tailed macaques stealing from the much larger orangutans.
Ah.
That doesn't prove nature is ruthless - macaques steal from anyone and anything: each other, temples, strollers, film crews, etc.
Similarly, orangutans thieves are usually the sneakier ones. A class usually consists of one age group.
This is my problem with your arguments. They're based on assumptions with minimal reference to ground truths,
Given that you're citing a tv show which I assume involves either captive orangs being prepped for living in the wild, or orphan orangs being prepped to live without humans as a food source, the "ground truths" probably should include the fact that both of those categories of orangs perform behaviors which have not been observed in wild orangs.
also, please explain "randos"...does the definition now include macaques? (asking seriously, and saying so, so you don't think i'm mocking or insulting you)
so the discussion proceeds along lines of endless clarification.
(Edit: Behavior in adult hierarchies is much closer to what you're describing though.)
keenir wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 1:06 am
Also not sure how thievery among the essentially solitary orangs, proves something about a "natural order" among humans. I mean, yes, they're primates, but only gibbons are further from us in the Great Apes clade.
Orangutans are arguably the gentlest of the great apes.
by and large, particularly with humans certainly. though naturalists studying them have noted that orangs rape each other more than any other nonhuman primate.
I've heard bioogists argue that human behavior is undecided among chimpanzee and bobobo styles,
undecided?
and you don't want to copy chimpanzee behavior. The line of thought that emphasizes tribal unity unintentionally leads to fascism, with nations as ersatz tribes.
keenir wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 1:06 am
That increasing the number of farms, decreases the amount of forests and wildlife? Aside from the fact that the Mayans did it for centuries (as one tv presenter put it, "At the heights of the Maya[n periods], you could stand at the top of a temple, look out to the horizon, and not see a single tree.")
Aside from that, we're seeing it in action most times that expanding human settlements compete for space with wilderness.
Let me try that again: Do you have evidence that the earth can support our current population trajectory without mass production?
You aren't saying what we'd stop mass producing. Farms that stretch for acres and kilometers are producing produce en masse, so do you count them?
keenir wrote: ↑Thu Feb 17, 2022 1:06 am
Then I don't see how citing "Maoist ones" is anything but a strawman in your own statement. Unless I'm missing something.
Even if you say you don't have a government, some people will fill that power vacuum. What if those people divert resources to make useless products?
Define 'useless'. Things can bring joy to children and everyone, yet not neccessarily fulfil any strictly utilitarian function.
Those products could be anything: low quality iron for Maoists, party dresses for all their friends if they're fashionistas, and so on.
Wouldn't Maoists want good quality iron?
And how dare anyone have party dresses! *gasp*theatrical shock*