Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 10th, 2025, 6:54 am
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 9th, 2025, 10:11 am
This non-existence is why you cannot post a photograph of a hierarchy: it has no existence in the real world, outside our minds, that is. In our minds is where our maps reside, and on those maps, you will find contour lines, fluid dynamics, and hierarchies too.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 9th, 2025, 1:50 pm
On the very most basic level, your claim is that groups of social animals do not have hierarchies...
No, it isn't. My claim is that most or all animals behave as we observe them to. According to their nature. Sometimes, as we observe these creatures, we notice something we think is a pattern, as we give that pattern the label "hierarchy". The animals are quite real. So is their behaviour.
But the pattern we believe we recognise, and the things we think that pattern might mean, and its consequences? All of those are in our minds, and there is no evidence of them at all in the real world. Because they don't exist in the real world.
If looking at it this way is too confusing ...
It is not confusing at all. I expect you to sprout post-modern nonsense that pays scant attention to reality (often with an emoticon).
I will reply in detail for other readers because it's interesting. I do not expect the following to make any difference to you. Rather, I expect you to dismiss the following with another quick, airy post-modern comment.
Some common types of hierarchies observed in the animal kingdom:
Dominance Hierarchy (linear or pecking order):
Eg: Chickens, wolves, baboons.
Alphas have priority access to food, mates, and preferred resting places, and these are allotted down the line.
Despotic Hierarchy
Eg: Chimpanzees, elephant seals.
One individual (or sometimes a small group) holds absolute power over the others with control over resources, mates, and territory.
Matrilineal Hierarchy
Example: Elephants, hyenas.
Social rank is inherited via the female line, with daughters ranking just below their mothers, and all females over any males.
Age-Based Hierarchy
Example: Orcas, some bird species.
Older group members command higher status than younger ones, due to their more experience and knowledge. Matriarchs control the pod's movements and decisions.
Size-Based Hierarchy
Eg. many Fish fin species
Larger individuals dominate smaller ones, often securing better spots for feeding or mating.
Territorial Hierarchies:
Eg. Many birds and fish
Dominance is based on territory ownership where higher-ranked individuals control prime territory for mating and resources.
Colonial hierarchies
Eg. Ants, bees
The main castes are the queen, workers, and males. There are subdivisions in the largest group, workers. Young workers start out caring for larvae and cleaning. graduate to foraging and fighting. They "graduate" to become foragers and builders. Size matters here too, because the largest workers take on the role of defenders.
Each of these hierarchies is an evolved adaptation. There are real. These structures are needed for those species to survive. By contrast, starlings, sardines, guppies, penguins, bats and parrots form loose groups based on general consensus. Thus we see that hierarchies are real phenomena - a means of ordering multiple members of a group, in contrast with unstructured collectives.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 10th, 2025, 6:54 am, then simply consider how these animals would be, how they would behave, and how they would live their lives in the real world, if there were no humans. The animals would be exactly as we observe them to be. But there would be no thought, and no talk, of "hierarchy", because that's down to us humans, and we aren't there.
This is an assumption that does not stand up to scrutiny.
Bull elephant seals have one dominant male, a harem, and beta males. The betas fight to establish their own sub-hierarchy - to earn a fight with the dominant. The betas are not only aware of the hierarchy, the fact dominates their lives. Groups of weaker betas with no hope of challenging will lurk on the sidelines, hoping for a chance to force sex on stray females without being caught by the alpha.
These animals possess theory of mind - they know when the alpha can see them or not. Their survival, and the continuation of their genes, depends on this awareness.