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Can a monkey be smarter than us?

I didn't mean that social intelligence should be used as a measure of overall intelligence at all. My point was the exact opposite: that there are numerous measures of intelligence, and they are almost all contextual. Social intelligence is just one of them.
 
Granted, but the point still stands humans tend to outperform other primates in that particular arena.
 
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Some of these gents were smarter than many other primates,,
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After all they made much more money than I ever will...
 
Granted, but the point still stands humans tend to outperform other primates in that particular arena.
Well, yeah. I was just trying to illustrate that intelligence is an undefined, multifaceted, highly-contextual and often subjective concept. Though the example could've been better.
 
A Jayson thread about monkeys. Excuse me for a moment, everybody.

(*Wipes tear from corner of eye*)

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Weeellll...

Two things to consider.

One, I think animals are changing. Wht would they do this?
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Two. The brain. It can cope, even with great loss. Robert Lawrence, British soldier
Lawrence wrote about his experience in the Scots Guards at the Battle of Mount Tumbledown when, in his moment of victory on the eastern slopes, he was almost killed when a bullet fired by an Argentine sniper tore off the side of his head.
[...]

Lawrence's wound was caused by a 7.62×51mm round passing through the rear of his skull, to emerge at his hairline above his right eye. He lay on the thin cover of snow on the exposed mountaintop for six hours. Airlifted off Tumbledown, Lawrence was left outside a makeshift operating theatre without painkillers. Two days from his 22nd birthday, he assumed he was the last to be operated on because he was the least likely to survive (triage).

Lawrence lost 43% of his brain and was paralysed down one side of his body. He was awarded the Military Cross on 11 October 1982.[8] He was discharged from the army on 14 November 1983. He spent a year in a wheelchair and doctors predicted he would never walk again. He eventually regained most movement although with a slight limp, a paralysed left arm, involuntary muscle contractions and posttraumatic stress disorder.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Lawrence_(British_Army_officer)
 
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