> >Memetic transfers within non-human species are fairly well documented.
> >Seasonally-changing songs are transferred from whale to whale around the
> >planet. Gorillas trained in ASL will teach it to their children.
> >Chimpanzees teach each other simple technologies they've invented - such as
> >fishing for ants by poking sticks into ant-hills.
> 
> I can only remain skeptical about all these statements. 'Memetic 
> transfer' itself is a clanging term, hardly describable, certainly known 
> only to a select few.
> 
> _Mimetic behavior_ is certainly well documented. Some classification of 
> learning is probable among chimps, although there is no proof it is not 
> mimicry.
> 
> Signing among laboratory gorillas is not transferred without 
> experimental/human reinforcement. It is even controversial whether or not 
> it is separate from mimicry and memorization behavior.
> 
> (And it's termites the chimps go after.... Much tastier.)
Let's consider early 1980's autolearning software as a standard.
I have not heard of any reported learning by animals that was not 
obviously possible using the above software [now, hardware's another 
story....]
This software's competence is somewhere below a 1-year old's, if not an 
infant's.
Clearly, humans have hardware support for memetics that has yet to be 
discerned in other animals.  [Dolphins are fuzzy in terms of future 
progress.]  And was not duplicated in the above software.
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/   Towards the conversion of data into information....
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/   Kenneth Boyd
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