Saturday, March 14, 2015

humans are intelligent bacteria

First off i would like to acknowledge my incredibly intelligent human friends that make me think and grow all the time. like seriously, all yall thoughts challenge me and i really feel lucky to think the way i do and a lot of it is to do with you guys.  so much of why other people outside of us think I hold any form of intellect is because of you guys. the way i think and speak and feel. thank yall so much

ok!
so what if we had a self destruct button? would we know how to use it? would be responsible with it?say if the button was set off at the right time that it would benefit the greater population, would we know when to press it? 
and say we did, since we've seen countless self-destructions before, its in our education, when to and when not to push it, how permanent the effect would be, who you would affect etc etc
what would the mortality rate be, what other issues would rise from it..
if death was that easy, would south korea be so hard on its students?

bacteria are actually able to do this. they do it under stress, leaking their internal systems so that their lifeless components can be recycled into the bacteria mass. Somehow, they coordinate to single out one or a few cells within the population to die for the greater good. They are able to regulate this ability so that it is beneficial for their colony.
they may not have human brains and do human things but they are capable of killing us and are more numerous than us. But, they also live really short lives and are spared by humans' greatest strength and greatest weakness: emotion . (emotion is also the cause for us to view a short life as a negative thing)

we may study them but they also study us in a less humanly intentional but more instinctive way that enables their survival. they are aware of us and act to respond to us. they can sense molecules (like say chemicals in our sweat) that we emit to move towards us, infecting us and colonizing, or just simply living in our gut and keeping us all happy. in truth, we need bacteria, and i guess they kinda need us.. but not really..
bacteria can live in other lifeforms to continue to rule the world. we on the other hand will not be able to digest food without them.  

we and every other lifeform are actually at the mercy of bacteria. every cow, fern, protist, algae, etc 
and we can all learn from bacteria. they are so successful because they work as a team.
how they evade antibiotics and immune systems and continue their population is all because they work together towards their uniform goals.

so humans are truly NOT that simple. we have emotion. we hurt each other and ourselves. bacteria dont do that. but bacteria do not experience a sense of loss or joy the way we do. but what is intelligence anyway? we're all trying to survive and satisfy our emotions.
Hell im making seemingly thoughtless bacteria emotional. using the term 'martyr' and painting an image that they are a hardworking, united and considerate community. but they cant think otherwise. they are just freakin bacteria. 

i suppose in the end humans are bacteria are totally different,  with different goals as such. is survival the definition of success? is it better to be simple or complex? is it better to feel great and feel like shit and create chaos or is it better to not feel at all and maintain order? is it even right to quantify and qualify these things? in the end, we all are just being. and being together. its too robotic for us (emotional fucks) to accept that progressing a population and assisting other members of our ecosystems is the natural goal. we can be influenced. we can be brainwashed. and we can hurt each other and our own emotions sometimes cause us to do shit that actually makes us feel worse.


3 comments:

Kero Kero said...

I feel like, a part of this thing is about human emotions and human values which are some derived from emotions?? and ethics?? Like we all want the "greater good" cause that's what being human has taught us. That we strive for efficiency and ergonomy, satisfaction and experience and we count working towards those things, as the values that will make us successful.

Do we define human success as majority satisfaction and survival??

I lost my point.

Xedalenar said...

Been waiting for a response like this for so long! This is great. The best part is, there is no answer wahoo life

AcionMan! said...

The unique thing about humans is that as far as we know we're the only species that doesn't act according to it's "programming" and has the ability to reflect on its actions and drives

You put monkeys in a jungle and, leaving all other variable the same, you come back in 100,000 years and the monkeys you see then are going to behave pretty much the same way that their ancestors did

Not so with humans. Put a bunch of humans in a jungle and when you come back in 100,000 years, controlling all other variables, you could expect to find anything from a space-fearing civilisation to simple tribal groups to having nothing at all because they blew themselves up.

Sure we might have some "natures" the same way other animals do (human mothers tend to be very maternal, its easy for us to form us vs. them opinions, etc.) but at the same time we have the ability to transcend and become aware of this nature.

You put a chimp in the middle of a turf war with another clan of chimps, and the only thing he's gonna do during that fight is "think" about killing the rival clan members and not dying. You put a man in the middle of a violent crowd swayed up by mob mentality it's very possible that he'll have a moment where he sees his situation from a step back and thinks "man wtf is going on this is nuts"

So I guess what I'm saying is, we probably could learn alot from bacteria, as far as order and the greater good and pure survival are concerned. In fact, I'm sure that in our 200,000 year history, at least one society has come to resemble something like a "human bacteria". But because of our ability to transcend and change our ideals and drives, such a society would inevitably change, and then it might come to resemble one closer to an ant colony, or a bee hive, or hell a pride of lions. Going back to what I said before, one of our "natures" might be to crave the order and stability that bacteria have, but that's only one of our thousands of drives and if we did focus on it, our other "natures" would be neglected.

So yeah, its only important as much as you perceive those things as having value