All my other videos have focused on individuals and their works. This is one of the first starting from a question. In terms of making it more video like I will look into it. Mostly I make it for putting in the pocket and listening to but thanks for the feedback
That being on the right is the alien god that taught those dudes their language. Now he slinks off to his spaceship while they engage in their first ever sentences.
I think one of the interesting aspects is that vocal communication in apes is mostly instinctive calls whereas they think and learn gesture. I wonder to what extent our speech - which is learned - is based on gesture and whether any of our vocal communication is originally instinctive sounds?
Thats an interesting thought. It also makes me think about when children teach their babies to sign they are thirsty etc. before they can speak to aid communication.
@@Philosophyandinterestingre-v8d That's interesting. I'll have to look into baby signing, I've never had one lol. I guess also like pointing is useful but apes don't understand the whole pointing thing I believe it is a purely human thing which brings up even more questions!
I dont think we always have been able (if you think prehistoric, though development of written language is another subject all together too) There was also other research I hit researching thats not included in the video
Great video, would love it if there were different images for it to be engaging!
All my other videos have focused on individuals and their works. This is one of the first starting from a question. In terms of making it more video like I will look into it. Mostly I make it for putting in the pocket and listening to but thanks for the feedback
That being on the right is the alien god that taught those dudes their language. Now he slinks off to his spaceship while they engage in their first ever sentences.
I think one of the interesting aspects is that vocal communication in apes is mostly instinctive calls whereas they think and learn gesture. I wonder to what extent our speech - which is learned - is based on gesture and whether any of our vocal communication is originally instinctive sounds?
Thats an interesting thought.
It also makes me think about when children teach their babies to sign they are thirsty etc. before they can speak to aid communication.
@@Philosophyandinterestingre-v8d That's interesting. I'll have to look into baby signing, I've never had one lol. I guess also like pointing is useful but apes don't understand the whole pointing thing I believe it is a purely human thing which brings up even more questions!
What AI program reads this? Do you script it as a conversation when you make the video?
Research and put it together with source materials, structural documents, and customizing focus then NotebookLM.
We do it because we can ? Maybe
I dont think we always have been able (if you think prehistoric, though development of written language is another subject all together too) There was also other research I hit researching thats not included in the video