Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - A mutant orangutan was found in Africa. It can walk upright and have emotions. Can you really become a person through continuous evolution?

A mutant orangutan was found in Africa. It can walk upright and have emotions. Can you really become a person through continuous evolution?

Before we start the topic discussion, let's take a look at a research project "Ai Project" by Tetsuro Matsuzawa of Kyoto University in Japan. The purpose is to train a bonobo named Xiao Ai and observe his language learning skills and understanding of numbers. Of course, we won't explain the process in detail. Let's look at the results first:

Who can remember this bonobo? This kind of memory is basically unforgettable among human beings, and only top players can do it, but Xiao Ai seems to be easy to operate. If humans provide a complete set of education system for bonobos, all orangutans will receive special education from birth and get correct guidance. /kloc-What will happen in 0/00 years?

The Rise of the Planet of the Apes describes that drugs for treating Alzheimer's disease lead to abnormal brain development and rapid improvement of IQ of orangutans. Under the leadership of Caesar, a chimpanzee who even exceeds human intelligence, the group action ability of the whole population exceeds that of human beings. Because of the strict rank and super execution ability of orangutans, their development after becoming an independent kingdom is limitless.

Of course, in theory, this kind of thing is unlikely to happen. It is only a bridge in The Rise of the Planet of the Apes, but in reality, the routine of educating orangutans has really been carried out, and more than once. Let's watch!

Case 1: As early as 193 1 year, a chimpanzee named Guya was adopted by a couple of psychologists, Kellogg, in order to find out whether the chimpanzee's IQ is determined by genes or environment.

At the beginning of the experiment, quaint progress was much faster than that of human children. But after one year old, chimpanzees are much older than humans, and quaint is still wild, so the aggressive quaint is sent back to the zoo. Later, this orangutan named Guya died of depression at the age of three because he could no longer fit in with orangutans.

Case 2: 1977, an orangutan named Chantek was adopted and conducted an experimental plan on whether the behavior was innate or acquired. Chantek was brought up as a human child, and he quickly learned sign language, and even the concept of money was established. However, similar to the first case, Shantek's aggression was difficult to tame, and he was finally sent back to the zoo and died of depression at the age of 20.

From the human point of view, this is no problem at all, because we think that human beings are human beings, and we must first ensure human safety. Orangutans are just animals and can be controlled in the zoo if necessary. Imagine how a human child would handle this. Will he be locked up? Presumably, as long as there are no serious criminal cases, they will definitely return to society, because human beings are tolerant and sympathetic to their compatriots, but not to orangutans. The only possibility is fear, which is the thinking that this plan finally shows to human beings.