We have pretty solid evidence that a stone age tech group of humans can develop a technologically advanced society in a few 10s of thousands of years. I imagine it would take considerably longer for squirrels to get there and I would be much less confident they can do it at all. It may well be that human intelligence is an evolutionary accident that has only happened once in the universe.
The squirrel civilization would be a pretty impressive achievement, granted. The destruction of this particular species (humans) would seemingly be a tremendous loss universally, if intelligence is a rare thing. Nonetheless, I see it as only a certain vessel in which intelligence happened to arise. I see no particular reason why intelligence should be specific to it, or why we should prefer it over other containers should the opportunity present itself. We would share more in common with an intelligent squirrel civilization than a band of gorillas, even though we would share more genetically with the latter. If I were cryogenically frozen and thawed out a million years later by the world-dominating Squirrel Confederacy, I would certainly live with them rather than seek out my closest primate relatives.
EDIT: I want to expand on this slightly. Say our civilization were to be completely destroyed, and a group of humans that had no contact with us were to develop a new civilization of their own concurrent with a squirrel population doing the same on the other side of the world. If that squirrel civilization were to find some piece of our history, say the design schematics of an electric toothbrush, and adopt it as a part of their knowledge, I would say that for all intents and purposes, the squirrels are more “us” than the humans, and we would survive through the former, not the latter.
I don’t see any fundamental reason why intelligence should be restricted to humans. I think it’s quite possible that intelligence arising in the universe is an extremely rare event though. If you value intelligence and think it might be an unlikely occurrence then the survival of some humans rather than no humans should surely be a much preferred outcome?
I disagree that we would have more in common with the electric toothbrush wielding squirrels. I’ve elaborated more on that in another comment.
Preferred, absolutely. I just think that the survival of our knowledge is more important than the survival of the species sans knowledge. If we are looking to save the world, I think an AI living on the moon pondering its existence should be a higher priority than a hunter-gatherer tribe stalking wildebeest. The former is our heritage, the latter just looks like us.
We have pretty solid evidence that a stone age tech group of humans can develop a technologically advanced society in a few 10s of thousands of years. I imagine it would take considerably longer for squirrels to get there and I would be much less confident they can do it at all. It may well be that human intelligence is an evolutionary accident that has only happened once in the universe.
The squirrel civilization would be a pretty impressive achievement, granted. The destruction of this particular species (humans) would seemingly be a tremendous loss universally, if intelligence is a rare thing. Nonetheless, I see it as only a certain vessel in which intelligence happened to arise. I see no particular reason why intelligence should be specific to it, or why we should prefer it over other containers should the opportunity present itself. We would share more in common with an intelligent squirrel civilization than a band of gorillas, even though we would share more genetically with the latter. If I were cryogenically frozen and thawed out a million years later by the world-dominating Squirrel Confederacy, I would certainly live with them rather than seek out my closest primate relatives.
EDIT: I want to expand on this slightly. Say our civilization were to be completely destroyed, and a group of humans that had no contact with us were to develop a new civilization of their own concurrent with a squirrel population doing the same on the other side of the world. If that squirrel civilization were to find some piece of our history, say the design schematics of an electric toothbrush, and adopt it as a part of their knowledge, I would say that for all intents and purposes, the squirrels are more “us” than the humans, and we would survive through the former, not the latter.
I don’t see any fundamental reason why intelligence should be restricted to humans. I think it’s quite possible that intelligence arising in the universe is an extremely rare event though. If you value intelligence and think it might be an unlikely occurrence then the survival of some humans rather than no humans should surely be a much preferred outcome?
I disagree that we would have more in common with the electric toothbrush wielding squirrels. I’ve elaborated more on that in another comment.
Preferred, absolutely. I just think that the survival of our knowledge is more important than the survival of the species sans knowledge. If we are looking to save the world, I think an AI living on the moon pondering its existence should be a higher priority than a hunter-gatherer tribe stalking wildebeest. The former is our heritage, the latter just looks like us.