Originally posted by: wfbberzerker
Originally posted by: Marshallj
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Nonetheless, we're wayyyyyyyyy smarter than people were even 100 years ago.
I wouldn't say that...
100 years ago people were self sufficient. Nowadays most people are helpless consumers.
well, then thats saying that human knowledge is based solely on its ability to survive, which, by the survival of the human species itself, shows that that isn't true.
actually, the fact that we aren't self-sufficient shows that we are intelligent, since we have essentially created large groups that are specialized, much like the cells in our body. some make food, some protect, etc.
I think Berzerker has hit a profound point and perhaps doesn't realize not only how correct he is, but how significant whata he says is.
Consider this:
The human body consists of billions of distinct cells. Each of those cells forms a larger system with like cells; skin cells form the epidermal layer with other skin cells, heart cells form the heart, etc etc.
All of those parts work almost independently, with little to no feedback from the other internal systems - The brain certainly doesn't monitor the work of the white blood cells, the heart doesn't get involved with what the skin does, and so on.
Each of these billions of cells has a job to do, encoded in its DNA strands, and it does it without complaining and without being told what to do.
In a sense, our bodies are communists.
Society has evolved in much the same way. At first we were scattered across the globe, working independently. Now, technology has shrunk the world to a size where we're much more intertwined, our actions have repercussions that ripple out further than before, and we serve as the individual cells in sentient being we don't even know exists - The world. Really, you can think of humankind as one giant organism, in which the individual humans are like the cells.
We're not to the point where we're totally autonomous and capable of functioning without other inputs, and I have no delusions that we'll ever reach that point. I think the likelihood that a sentient machine intelligence emerges is a million times more probably than humankind ever working together completely and utterly coordinated; I blame our memes.
Regardless of how far we are from being like the human body, we nonetheless share some similarities.
Regarding the idea of "are we smarter than the people 100 years ago?" it depends.
Have our brains evolved or devolved in the last century? Certainly not. 100 years isn't enough time to experience any worthwhile mutations in biological organisms.
Nonetheless, thanks to the fact that human knowledge is cumulative, and technology makes it multiplicative, the amount we know about the universe is growing at an exponential rate. Human understanding about the fundementals of every facet of knowledge has grown a thousandfold in the last century, and will continue to do so.
Our brains may be incapable of absorbing the entirety of the human knowledge base, but our ability to sift the important information from the unimportant remains intact, and therefore due to the information at our disposal, we ARE smarter than those that came before.