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Religion
In reply to the discussion: Do primates practice religion? [View all]muriel_volestrangler
(101,470 posts)60. I don't think you can identify an 'optimal state of information' for a species
Some information can be dangerous for an individual - it can make them a target, for instance. When you're down at the level of ethics, you're looking at information held by, and decisions made by, individuals. And it's not 'derived through evolutionary processes'. It's not inherited; it can be modified at any time. It can expand; sometimes knowledge, or information, contradicts previously held beliefs, sometimes it doesn't. It can be forgotten. It can be recorded outside the human.
It seems to me you're looking for a problem that you don't need to worry about.
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OK, the title may miss the point, but the book and the review are not about humans.
cbayer
Jun 2013
#6
Evidently we don't share a common definition of the term "biological evolution"
Fumesucker
Jun 2013
#49
Purpose implies intelligence, evolution certainly has effects but it is not intelligent
Fumesucker
Jun 2013
#28
Purposeful trial and error has a lot higher success rate than does evolution
Fumesucker
Jun 2013
#34
I don't think you can identify an 'optimal state of information' for a species
muriel_volestrangler
Jun 2013
#60
What I'm refering to is units of cultural information acting as genes.
napoleon_in_rags
Jun 2013
#62
Hope you are able to find it. I am on a road trip and would like to find it on audio.
cbayer
Jun 2013
#13
Thinking about religion rationally, and religiousity being innate are not mutually exclusive.
Warren Stupidity
Jun 2013
#10