Quokkastan wrote:Galloism wrote:So the dolphins you used as evidence were irrelevant to your argument all along?
Why do you try to bring up evidence that's irrelevant to your argument?
Ok, besides koalas, octopi, and humans, what else is known to tote around multiple things at one time?
Well, any marsupial really. If it has hands.
Also scorpions.
Would animals that carry multiple venoms that they adjust to match their prey count? Because, if so, add snakes and snails.
Do marsupials have hands or paws? I think raccoons have hands. Did you watch this clip of the raccoon grabbing the food and running away on its hind legs? With this type of food it's advantageous for the raccoon to be able to use its hands to carry the food while running away. In this case it's simultaneously carrying different pieces of the same food. But this specific problem isn't very complex because the raccoon is simply grabbing as much of the food as it can and running. If there had been different varieties of food available... then the benefit maximization problem would have been more complex. The more varieties of food available... the more complex the problem becomes. And the more complex the problem becomes... the more brain power/storage required to solve it.