Maybe. It depends. The precise function our cuteness response had for ancestors might be fulfilled by some other feature or perhaps the ancestral environment didn’t select individuals that way. Or maybe the cuteness criteria did evolve a little… just not has fast as our physical features did. Actually, I think we should expect it to evolve slower than our physical features just because plenty less-cute individuals will survive.
But then shouldn’t we expect similar stuff to happen for rabbits? for them to evolve away from the primordial shared cuteness criteria?
Actually, wait… human babies are rather more helpless than the babies of most other mammals, right? Shouldn’t more helplessness, more (and longer) dependence on adults result in stronger perception of cuteness of them? (via shifts in their appearance and our criteria)?
But then shouldn’t we expect similar stuff to happen for rabbits? for them to evolve away from the primordial shared cuteness criteria?
They may have. Just not as much.
Shouldn’t more helplessness, more (and longer) dependence on adults result in stronger perception of cuteness of them? (via shifts in their appearance and our criteria)?
I don’t think the reason modern humans take care of their children is just about how cute they are. We’ve developed additional instincts to encourage child rearing (cultural pressure, some more specialized attachments that individual parents have with just their children and not with other cute things). This is what I mean by the function being fulfilled by another feature. This isn’t evidence of anything in particular but cuteness feels sort of cognitively primitive, doesn’t it? Like fear? I don’t know if associating qualia like that is a permissible inference.
I’ve actually ranked this hypothesis third behind “Babies are cuter after all.” and “Coincidental superstimulus”.
It’s not much of a coincidence if most mammals have similar parental care-inducing cues—including big eyes. Nor is it a coincidence that baby rabbits exhibit such infantile traits more than human children do—this post deliberately chose rabbits as an example because they have cute babies. I rate all this as not adding up to a coincidence at all.
Maybe. It depends. The precise function our cuteness response had for ancestors might be fulfilled by some other feature or perhaps the ancestral environment didn’t select individuals that way. Or maybe the cuteness criteria did evolve a little… just not has fast as our physical features did. Actually, I think we should expect it to evolve slower than our physical features just because plenty less-cute individuals will survive.
But then shouldn’t we expect similar stuff to happen for rabbits? for them to evolve away from the primordial shared cuteness criteria?
Actually, wait… human babies are rather more helpless than the babies of most other mammals, right? Shouldn’t more helplessness, more (and longer) dependence on adults result in stronger perception of cuteness of them? (via shifts in their appearance and our criteria)?
Okay, now I’m just plain confused!
They may have. Just not as much.
I don’t think the reason modern humans take care of their children is just about how cute they are. We’ve developed additional instincts to encourage child rearing (cultural pressure, some more specialized attachments that individual parents have with just their children and not with other cute things). This is what I mean by the function being fulfilled by another feature. This isn’t evidence of anything in particular but cuteness feels sort of cognitively primitive, doesn’t it? Like fear? I don’t know if associating qualia like that is a permissible inference.
I’ve actually ranked this hypothesis third behind “Babies are cuter after all.” and “Coincidental superstimulus”.
It’s not much of a coincidence if most mammals have similar parental care-inducing cues—including big eyes. Nor is it a coincidence that baby rabbits exhibit such infantile traits more than human children do—this post deliberately chose rabbits as an example because they have cute babies. I rate all this as not adding up to a coincidence at all.