In this third lecture, Dr Heather Heying turns to the conditions sufficient for the emergence of sentient consciousness, exploring how life evolves the capacity to perceive, learn, and create. Drawing on the examples of primates, corvids, dolphins, elephants, wolves, and others, she reveals how traits such as long lifespans, extended childhoods, sociality, and play recur in the rare instances where sentience has independently evolved. These convergences, she argues, point to universals in the nature of intelligence itself, from cooperative learning to creative problem-solving. Along the way, Heying connects the biological scaffolding of consciousness to broader questions of culture and discovery, reclaiming science as a pursuit not only of logical proof but also of intuitive insight, where the recognition of pattern is inseparable from the apprehension of beauty.
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Authors and Works Mentioned in this Episode:
- Thomas Henry Huxley
- Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Spiral Staircase: Sagrada Família, Barcelona, Spain
- Alhambra: Granada, Spain
- Mattias Desmet
- Hannah Arendt
- Henri Poincaré
- Louis Agassiz
- Yanagi Soetsu