Yes, but: whales and elephants have brains several times the size of humans, and they’re yet to build an industrial civilization.
Size/capacity isn’t all, but In terms of the capacity which actually matters (synaptic count, and upper cortical neuron count) - from what I recall elephants are at great ape cortical capacity, not human capacity. A few specific species of whales may be at or above human cortical neuron capacity but synaptic density was still somewhat unresolved last I looked.
Then, once a certain compute threshold was reached, it took a sharp left turn and started a civilization.
Human language/culture is more the cause of our brain expansion, not just the consequence. The human brain is impressive because of its relative size and oversized cost to the human body. Elephants/whales are huge and their brains are much smaller and cheaper comparatively. Our brains grew 3x too large/expensive because it was valuable to do so. Evolution didn’t suddenly discover some new brain architecture or trick (it already had that long ago). Instead there were a number of simultaneous whole body coadapations required for larger brains and linguistic technoculture to take off: opposable thumbs, expressive vocal cords, externalized fermentation (gut is as energetically expensive as brain tissue—something had to go), and yes larger brains, etc.
Language enabled a metasystems transition similar to the origin of multicelluar life. Tribes formed as new organisms by linking brains through language/culture. This is not entirely unprecedented—insects are also social organisms of course, but their tiny brains aren’t large enough for interesting world models. The resulting new human social organisms had inter generational memory that grew nearly unbounded with time and creative search capacity that scaled with tribe size.
You can separate intelligence into world model knowledge (crystal intelligence) and search/planning/creativity (fluid intelligence). Humans are absolutely not special in our fluid intelligence—it is just what you’d expect for a large primate brain. Humans raised completely without language are not especially more intelligent than animals. All of our intellectual super powers are cultural. Just as each cell can store the DNA knowledge of the entire organism, each human mind ‘cell’ can store a compressed version of much of human knowledge and gains the benefits thereof.
The cultural metasystems transition which is solely completely responsible for our intellectual capability is a one time qualitative shift that will never reoccur. AI will not undergo the same transition, that isn’t how these work. The main advantage of digital minds is just speed, and to a lesser extent, copying.
Size/capacity isn’t all, but In terms of the capacity which actually matters (synaptic count, and upper cortical neuron count) - from what I recall elephants are at great ape cortical capacity, not human capacity. A few specific species of whales may be at or above human cortical neuron capacity but synaptic density was still somewhat unresolved last I looked.
Human language/culture is more the cause of our brain expansion, not just the consequence. The human brain is impressive because of its relative size and oversized cost to the human body. Elephants/whales are huge and their brains are much smaller and cheaper comparatively. Our brains grew 3x too large/expensive because it was valuable to do so. Evolution didn’t suddenly discover some new brain architecture or trick (it already had that long ago). Instead there were a number of simultaneous whole body coadapations required for larger brains and linguistic technoculture to take off: opposable thumbs, expressive vocal cords, externalized fermentation (gut is as energetically expensive as brain tissue—something had to go), and yes larger brains, etc.
Language enabled a metasystems transition similar to the origin of multicelluar life. Tribes formed as new organisms by linking brains through language/culture. This is not entirely unprecedented—insects are also social organisms of course, but their tiny brains aren’t large enough for interesting world models. The resulting new human social organisms had inter generational memory that grew nearly unbounded with time and creative search capacity that scaled with tribe size.
You can separate intelligence into world model knowledge (crystal intelligence) and search/planning/creativity (fluid intelligence). Humans are absolutely not special in our fluid intelligence—it is just what you’d expect for a large primate brain. Humans raised completely without language are not especially more intelligent than animals. All of our intellectual super powers are cultural. Just as each cell can store the DNA knowledge of the entire organism, each human mind ‘cell’ can store a compressed version of much of human knowledge and gains the benefits thereof.
The cultural metasystems transition which is solely completely responsible for our intellectual capability is a one time qualitative shift that will never reoccur. AI will not undergo the same transition, that isn’t how these work. The main advantage of digital minds is just speed, and to a lesser extent, copying.