Humans have vanishingly little innate knowledge about the visual appearance of objects in the world. But we do have heightened sensitivity to certain textures or shapes characteristic of deadly animals (snakes & spiders mostly). This is evolutionarily ancient, not specific to us.
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And we are pretty useless at detecting still features, compared to time-varying ones, if you are walking and something that is occluded in your pheripheral vision starts to appear, maybe a rock behind a tree, your brain automatically notices.
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Humans deliberately selecting for certain (often preexisting) traits in animals is a completely different process from natural selection gradually encoding external knowledge into our DNA (e.g. what's a snake, what's an agent, wears a face, what are numbers, how to navigate, etc)
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This thread makes a point that I agree with. Can you tell me how you came up with the 500k years figure?
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