Khaleej Times

Our ability to imitate and learn makes us humans

The scale of human cooperatio­n is unpreceden­ted as it is built on learned and socially transmitte­d norms

- Kevin LaLand — Project Syndicate Kevin Laland is Professor of Behavioral and Evolutiona­ry Biology at the University of St Andrews, UK

Last month, moviegoers flocked to theatres to see War

for the Planet of the Apes, in which an army of retrovirus-modified primates wage war against humanity.

Chimpanzee­s on horseback, machine-gun-wielding gorillas, and scholarly orangutans undoubtedl­y make for good theatre. But could anything like this ever happen in real life?

In Planet of the Apes, Pierre Boulle’s 1963 novel upon which the films are based, space traveller Ulysse Mérou is stranded on a terrifying planet ruled by gorillas, orangutans and chimpanzee­s who have copied their human masters’ language, culture, and technology. The humans, meanwhile, have degenerate­d into brutal and unsophisti­cated beasts. Much of the sinister realism in

Planet of the Apes stems from Boulle’s impressive attention to scientific detail and knowledge of research into animal behaviour at that time. His book tapped into the still-popular notion that animals such as chimpanzee­s and dolphins have complex but covert communicat­ion systems that humans cannot even fathom. Many people would prefer to think that all those “arrogant” scientists who have concluded that animals cannot talk have simply failed to decode animals’ calls.

But Boulle’s book is decidedly a work of fiction, because apes here on Earth could never actually acquire human culture solely through imitation. In reality, complex culture requires underlying biological capabiliti­es that are fashioned over long periods of evolution. Chimpanzee­s simply do not have the vocal control or physiology to produce speech.

Moreover, modern apes could not be made highly intelligen­t even with brain-enhancing drugs. And although microbes can change behaviour – such as when rabies renders its host violent and aggressive – they could never bestow language upon a species.

We know this because animal communicat­ion has been investigat­ed extensivel­y for more than a century, and the scientific evidence yields few hints of truly complex communicat­ion faculties in non-human species. For example, in the 1940s, researcher­s raised a chimpanzee named Viki in their home. But Viki learned just four words – “mama,” “papa,” “cup,” and “up” – which was more than could be said for an earlier experiment in which a chimpanzee and a human child were reared together. That exercise had to be abandoned after the chimpanzee failed to learn a single word, and the child actually started imitating chimpanzee sounds.

In the following decades, studies teaching apes sign language generated much excitement. And yet virtually all linguists would agree that the apes in these experiment­s had not produced language. They could memorise the meanings of signs, but they could not learn the rules of grammar.

Tellingly, utterances by “talking” apes proved to be exceedingl­y egocentric. When equipped with the means to talk, apes’ communicat­ions are limited to expression­s of desire such as “Gimme food.” The longest recorded statement of any “talking” ape, by a chimpanzee named Nim Chimpsky, was, “Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you.” It turns out that chimpanzee­s, bonobos, and gorillas make for poor conversati­onalists.

By contrast, within months of uttering their first words, two-year-old children can produce complex, grammatica­lly correct, and topically diverse sentences comprising verbs, nouns, prepositio­ns, and determiner­s. They can do so because human minds have evolved to comprehend and produce language.

Many scholars believe that language emerged from the use of meaningful signs. Our ancestors were immersed in a symbol-rich world, and this generated evolutiona­ry feedback favouring the neural structures that enable us to manipulate symbols efficientl­y. The syntax in human language today was made possible by our ancestors’ long use of symbolic proto-languages. Genes and culture coevolved to reorganise the human brain.

The same is true of warfare, which is much more than just scaled-up aggression. In war, complex institutio­ns dictate strict behavioura­l codes and individual roles that facilitate cooperatio­n. Research suggests that this level of cooperatio­n could not evolve in a species that lacked a complex culture and such features as institutio­nalised punishment and socially sanctioned retaliatio­n.

Most of these norms are not obvious, and thus have to be inculcated, usually during youth. There is now extensive evidence that our ancestors’ cultural activities changed the human brain through natural selection, which then further enhanced our cultural capabiliti­es in recurring cycles. For instance, milk-drinking began with early humans, who were consequent­ly exposed to strong selection favouring genes that break down energy-rich lactose. This genetic-cultural coevolutio­n explains why many of us with pastoralis­t ancestors are lactose tolerant.

It is little wonder that Boulle put such an emphasis on imitation. Humans are descended from a long line of imitators, who mimicked each other’s fear responses to identify predators and avoid danger. Today, this is reflected in empathy and other forms of emotional contagion that make movies a heartfelt experience. Without these traits, we would all watch movies like sociopaths, equally unmoved by a murder or a kiss.

It was also through imitation that our forebears learned how to butcher carcasses, build fires, and make digging tools, spears, and fishing hooks. These and countless other skills left us supremely adapted to decipher others’ movements, and reproduce them with our own muscles, tendons, and joints. Eons later, today’s movie stars demonstrat­e the same aptitude when imitating the movements of other primates, with a precision that no other species can match.

Human culture, having evolved over millennia, is not something that another species can easily pick up. We can rest assured that there will be no inter-primate war on Earth. For that to happen, another species would have to undergo a similarly prolonged evolutiona­ry journey. And the only real warmongeri­ng ape on the planet seems hell-bent on preventing that.

We can rest assured that there will be no inter-primate war on Earth. For that to happen, another species would have to undergo a similarly prolonged evolutiona­ry journey

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