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I remember reading that their DNA and our DNA are almost identical. Can't remember the %, but it was something like 99% identical. Only a teensy bit of the DNA strand is different. Obviously, they don't build skyscrapers, iPods, refrigerators or nuclear weapons. They are, however, curious, dextrous, conniving, clever, communicative (with each other and with us through sign language), tribal (personal bonds, as opposed to mere herd instinct), individualistic with very distinct characters and roles in the tribe (and in relationship to humans), and they can learn and innovate. They also look, move and behave more like us than other animals, and relate to us in kindred ways, as if we were members of their tribe. Dolphins, elephants and others have some or most of these characteristics, plus bigger brains than humans, but chimp DNA is the most similar, almost identical.
We see a lot of similarities but also vast differences. What could be in that 1% (or so) bit of DNA that results in cities, libraries, cathedrals, guns, wristwatches, tall ships, astrolabes, hydroelectric dams and putting men on the moon? The Pyramids. Hubble. The Golden Gate Bridge. The Great Wall of China. Babylonia, Athens, Greece, Rome, Rio de Janeiro.
I could go on.
What IS it? Is anybody looking into this? In what ways are they investigating it? What are their theories? I haven't seen much on this particular question, which seems an awesomely important one: what makes us human? (--or, is it that bit of DNA that does?)
When I read about nuclear physics (in the popular literature--I'm not a scientist), I am struck by the baffling mystery at the heart of matter--a vanishing point, in the inmost (smallest) "region," that seems to look like this: + and -.
Now look at a Hubble photo of just one sector of the photographable Universe, with its mind-boggling display of whirling, twirling galaxies containing billions and billions of stars and trillions of planets.
What are we missing that creates civilization out of a tweak of one bit of DNA, and that creates EVERYTHING out of + and -?
Some people would say "God"--an all-powerful outside agent ("first cause") who cares about us tiny critters and the anthills we've built on Earth. I'm an agnostic on that aspect of "God" although I think there's something there, that may be discoverable and knowable, in our virtually universal longing for a cosmic protector and for extension of our lives--or meaning invested in our lives--by God or Gods. (Personally, I think it is projection--that is, there is something in us that is aiming at becoming the God or Gods whom we imagine to be controlling things; it is a collective wish or projection, and it is achievable, as a collective endeavor: humans becoming all- or very powerful, living for millennia and maybe forever (never dying) and developing the knowledge and benevolence of our best projection. 'We are the God we have been waiting for.")
But I am NOT saying that this apparent mystery at the heart of matter, and in that DNA bit which seems to be the difference between merely clever apes and writing "A Midsummer Night's Dream" or putting cameras on Mars and around Jupiter, is unknowable and undiscoverable. It is probably no more unknowable and undiscoverable than the Americas were to Medieval Europeans. We seem to be heading right for those discoveries. What makes us as conscious and as collectively and increasingly powerful as we obviously are? How does space, time and "matter," below the quark "level," create the space, time and what is obviously "matter" (hundreds of billions of galaxies) at the human level (our experience of it) and the human-perceivable Cosmic level?
These two questions are IN our brains and are a pretty good summary of the whole project of science. (What is matter and why do we care?)
Just wanted to tell you what this article stimulated in this particular human brain. Why "altruism" in chimps prompted this train of thought, I'm not sure, but I think it is a good example of that 1% of DNA (apparently?) creating civilization. And I'm very curious about HOW it does that, if it does, and if anybody knows what is going on with that research.
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