Are we really overestimating human intelligence

Are we really overestimating human intelligence

When we talk about mental ability, humans think that their thoughts are unparalleled, but are humans really smarter than other animals?

Do n’t assume that those who line up outside the Brisbane Art Museum in Australia love art and culture. In fact, they only saw a painting only recently.

After some training, these visitors gained an artistic sense, making them more like picasso Cube or Claude Monet's paintings, which reflected his dream of reality rather than other paintings displayed in various exhibition halls.

I mean these art critics or tourists are ordinary bees living in the garden. They were trained to find his prize behind some artworks until he distinguished picasso from Monet's paintings.

It is not surprising that bees use tinnitus to express this talent, especially if people think that bees have smaller brains than thin heads.

In fact, the ability of bees to recognize artistic style is just a new achievement in the achievements of bees. For example, bees can count up to four, read complex signs, learn from observations and communicate with each other through secret codes (the famous vibration dance).

Before the bee set off on his journey to find food, he estimated the distance to various flowers and then planned a complicated path so that he could collect the most nectar with the least effort.

In the cell, bees have a wide range of work, including cleaning and transporting dead bees out of the cell, and then collecting water and dripping it into the wax tray to heat the interior of the cell.

Although the neurons in the human brain are 100,000 times larger than the neurons in the bee brain, many of our valuable behavioral principles are embodied in the bee colony, and their movement within the cell is coordinated with each other.

So, what is the use of gray matter in the human brain? How do we distinguish us from other animals.

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