cornholio 7 hours ago

The trait of caring and providing for other injured or vulnerable members of the group is widespread in the animal kingdom, there is even a name for it, allocare. Since social groups usually form based on family kinship, it can be explained on selfish gene dynamics.

So the argument was always gradual, not that social care is unique to civilization, but that it happens to an extent (such as the very long recovery period and food resources required to heal a femur) that we can arbitrarily call "civilization".

On the other hand, you could stretch that Scotsman in the opposite direction: do we really provide enough care to other people to the point we are different from animals and can claim ourselves truly civilized?

bambax 7 hours ago

Yeah, well, in that case ants are civilized (they probably are).

  • BurningFrog 6 hours ago

    Ants in a colony are so closely related that the colony can be thought of a one individual.

    From this perspective ant helping each other is similar to cells in a body working together.