Re: Trek got it right? Humanoid aliens possible, Cambridge professor s
The electrc eel will not be able to build or operate circuits under water.
Neither could human beings until 60 years ago. "I don't know how to do this at the moment" is not an evolutionary constraint that I'm aware of.
Actually, my impression is it would be a lot harder for aquatic life forms to figure out how to make electric circuits on land than on water. Water is an environment they understand and are comfortable manipulating; atmosphere is foreign to them, and they would probably have a lot of trouble conceiving of how to even build an electric circuit that doesn't require the presence of seawater.
I also doubt the possibility to manufacture suits under water that would allow fish to explore the land.
I doubt it would be EASY. But then, so are spaceships and submarines, two things which it took humans over a hundred thousand years to event after they mastered toolmaking.
And the most basic tools are axe and hammer.
For land animals, yes. The most basic tools for an aquatic life form would probably be the shovel and the knife. The shovel, for digging holes in the sea bed and constructing shelters and fortifications, and the knife, for killing predators or food animals that the toolmaker otherwise wouldn't be able to take down.
Interestingly, other kinds of tools would be more useful to aquatic animals than they would to humans. Air-breathing aquatics would very soon discover that they can prolong their underwater endurance and even extend their diving range by trapping pockets of air under domes. They would also find different types of weapons easier to construct; where humans used strings and pieces of wood to construct bows and arrows, aquatics would find use for spring-loaded cavitation devices, creating and then collapsing air bubbles fast enough to stun predators. Moreover, higher sound conductivity of water would lead them to discover forms of sonar (assuming this isn't a natural ability for them) centuries sooner than humans developed radar; this could and probably would lead to advances in mathematics and abstract reasoning that would promote even more advanced forms of toolmaking.
You won't see an octopus using those properly, ever.
An octopus would have little use for a hammer or an axe, especially under water; an Octopus will never need to chop down a tree, never need to split a piece of wood, and will never use wood to build a shelter for itself. But a shovel and a spear would be the most useful things in the world to a creature that is otherwise too soft and boneless to dig through hardened obstructions or fight off bony predators trying to eat it.
And the fact that an octopus would be in a position to encounter electricity in a much less lethal and more easily accessible fashion than humans means they would discover defensive uses of electricity relatively quickly. Assuming they don't somehow learn how to domesticate electric eels or electric rays as hunting beasts, they would have access to their corpses often enough to eventually figure out HOW they generate electricity. Then they can either use those organs themselves, stimulating them artificially, or find a way to duplicate it technologically.
Once you know how to trigger an electrical discharge underwater, you know how to create an electric circuit. Once you have an electric circuit -- actually, well before then, but just for the sake of argument here -- then you have the rudiments of a digital computer.