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Humans are proud of a lot of things, from particle accelerators to poetry to Pokemon.
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All of them made possible because of something humans value extremely highly:
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Intelligence.
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We think of intelligence as a trait like height or strength,
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but when we try to define it, things get fuzzy.
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In a nutshell, intelligence is a mechanism to solve problems.
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Especially the problem of staying alive, which involves finding food and shelter,
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fighting sexual competitors, or fleeing from predators.
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Intelligence is not a single thing;
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it includes the ability to gather knowledge, to learn, be creative, form strategies, or engage in critical thinking.
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It manifests itself in a huge variety of behaviors.
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From hardwired or instinct like reactions to different degrees of learning, to some sort of awareness.
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But not all scientists agree where it begins or what even should count as intelligence.
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To make this even more complicated,
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intelligence is also connected to consciousness since awareness is helpful for problem-solving.
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But we're exploring consciousness in other videos, so today we'll leave it aside.
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Okay,
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Intelligence isn't exactly clear-cut, so maybe we can think of it as more like a flexible set of skills:
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A toolbox.
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Basic tools.
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The most basic tools in the intelligence toolbox are the ability to gather information, to save it, and to use it to learn.
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Information about the world is gathered through senses such as vision, sound, smell, touch or taste,
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and helps us navigate and react to the external world appropriately.
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But living things also need to keep track of the state of their own bodies,
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monitoring things like hunger and fatigue.
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Information is the basis of action for all living things,
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and without it, you're at the mercy of your surroundings, unable to react appropriately, or flexibly.
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Information is much more powerful if we can keep and save it, so the second tool is memory.
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Memory is the ability to save and recall information,
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so a living being doesn't have to start from scratch every time it perceives something relevant.
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Memories can be about events, places, and associations, but also behaviors like hunting or foraging methods.
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Some of these, like flying, have to be repeated over and over until they're mastered.
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This is what we call learning, the process of putting together a sequence of thoughts or actions.
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Basically a string of repeatable behaviors that can be varied and adapted.
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These three tools enable seemingly stupid creatures to act in surprisingly intelligent ways.
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The acellular slime mold, which is basically just a single huge slimy cell,
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shows behavior similar to an animal with a simple brain.
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When put in a maze with food at one end,
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the slime mold explores its surroundings, and marks its path with slime trails,
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sort of, smearing memories on the ground.
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As it continues exploring, it avoids the marked pathways and finds its way to the food.
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Instead of blindly getting stuck in dead-ends, the slime mold adapts its behavior to save time and effort.
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This behavior is hardwired, and scientists can't agree if that's intelligent,
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although it does give the slime mold a certain advantage.
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Bees are an example of more adaptive smart behavior.
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Scientists trained bumblebees to move a colored ball into a goal post for a sugar reward.
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Not only were the bees very skillful at this behaviour, which isn't natural to them,
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they got more efficient over time.
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When several balls were available, bees chose the ball that lay closest to the goal,
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even if it was a different color than the ball they were trained with.
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For more challenging problems, we need even more flexibility:
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Fancier tools.
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Building on the basic tools, more complex animals have a wider range of problems they can solve.
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They can memorize all kinds of associations, connections, and mechanical tricks.
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We'll call this tool “The Library of Knowledge”.
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Take raccoons. Their favorite kind of food is human food.
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Their approach to getting hold of such treats depends upon an assortment of theoretical and practical skills,
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that makes them master burglars, able to open windows or pick locks.
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In a study, raccoons were given boxes secured with different kinds of locks,
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like latches, bolts, plugs, or push bars.
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They needed less than 10 attempts to figure out how to open each box.
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Even when different locks were put together into increasingly difficult combinations that had to be solved in the right order,
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and with different amounts of strength.
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A year later, the raccoons still remembered how to open the boxes,
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and were as fast as when they had first solved the puzzle.
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Beyond our library of associations and skills, the most impressive tool in our box is creativity,
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a sort of mental duct tape.
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Being creative means producing something new and valuable from apparently unrelated things.
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In the context of intelligence this means making new and unusual connections.
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Pairing input with memories and skills, to come up with a unique solution to a problem.
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In another raccoon study, researchers showed the animals that by dropping pebbles into a water tank,
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they could raise the water level enough to reach a marshmallow floating at the top.
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One raccoon came up with a much better solution: it tipped the tub over.
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Another facet of creativity is applying a new resource to a task:
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Physical tools.
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Like primates that use sticks to fish for termites in trees, or some octopuses,
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which assemble collected coconut shells around themselves as a sort of portable armor to hide from enemies.
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Collecting materials for later use is connected to an even more advanced dimension of problem-solving:
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Planning.
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Planning means considering the activities required for a desired goal and putting them together in a plan.
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When unforeseen circumstances and new possibilities present themselves,
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they need to be assessed according to whether they match the plan or not.
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An example of this intelligent behavior is hoarding food to eat it later.
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This is an instinctive behavior in squirrels.
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But even though hiding food comes instinctively to them,
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they still need to use advanced thinking skills to make the best decisions.
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Squirrels examine every nut and weigh the time and effort it would take to hide it,
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against the benefits they would get from each one.
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Damaged or low-fat nuts are eaten right away,
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while nuts that still need to ripen go on the stockpile.
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Squirrels also pretend to bury nuts when they feel watched.
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These empty caches distract rivals from their real treasure.
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This is pretty advanced strategizing because to make a plan to distract someone else,
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you first have to be aware that there are others like you that want the same things.
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The more complex the problem, the more tools are needed in combination to solve it.
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So the more tools there are, the more flexibility a being has to solve the challenges life throws at them.
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But even for complex problems, each animal's individual situation is what counts.
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Squirrels are omnivores that defend their territories fiercely.
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For them, it makes sense to remember where there's food in different locations
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and trick their enemies to improve their chances of survival.
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Sheep don't have any such refined tricks up their sleeve, but they don't need to.
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They are grazers and live in flocks.
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The skills relevant to them are social.
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They recognize and remember many different sheep, and even humans for years; a completely different skill.
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Evolving and retaining a complex set of mental abilities they might never use would be a waste of resources for them.
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Humans went the opposite way and invested in an unusually diverse intelligence toolkit.
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While this was helpful, by accident we added another set of tools on top:
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Culture.
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No single person could ever build a space rocket or particle accelerator.
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But thanks to our ability to work together and to share knowledge across generations,
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we can overcome challenges beyond any single individual's ability.
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This allowed us to shape the planet to our liking.
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We also created new problems in the process: sudoku, tax forms, string theory.
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But also rapid climate change and antibiotic resistance.
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To solve these, we'll need to look past short-term survival and think about the distant future.
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We have the toolbox, we just need to use it.
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Speaking of tools for learning, we've heard from many teachers that are using our infographic posters in class.
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So we asked what would help them the most and made an education edition for teachers, students, and everyone else.
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They're slightly larger posters about various things that we'll expand over time.
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From a periodic table, to a world map or the human body.
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You can get them in our shop and support us if you want.
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And let us know which poster topics you want for your room or classroom.
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This video was part two of a three-part video series relating to big questions of life and the universe,
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made possible thanks to a grant from the Templeton World charity foundation.
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You'll find our sources and further reading in the video description.
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(Breezy outro music)13301
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