Hypothetically, if some human races are inferior to other human races, that would imply that all living things exist on a hierarchy of superiority. In which case, which of these animals is the most superior?
T-34 (OP) double-posted this 6 months ago, 51 seconds later[^][v]#1,378,771
The answer to this question is obviously objective and if you deny the obvious answer to this question that you can see clearly, you’ve been infected by the woke mind virus and are denying basic biological facts of nature.
Anonymous C joined in and replied with this 6 months ago, 5 minutes later, 7 minutes after the original post[^][v]#1,378,773
Missing from list is the Octupus.
Octopuses are generally considered to be the most intelligent cephalopods. They possess a high brain-to-body mass ratio and a significant number of neurons,
T-34 joined in and replied with this 6 months ago, 4 minutes later, 1 hour after the original post[^][v]#1,378,794
@previous (E)
I’ve heard a theory that alien life that lives on the surface of planetary bodies might not be as common. For example, in the solar system, Earth isn’t the only planetary object (including moons here) that has oceans made from liquid water. For example, Saturn’s moon Enceladus and Jupiter’s moon Europa both have cryovolcanoes (volcanoes that erupt water from a mantle made of liquid water through a crust made of ice instead of rock), and it’s thought that Europa has twice as much water in its subsurface oceans as Earth does. So since on moons around gas giants, liquid oceans can exist at much further distances from the host star, conditions don’t have to be as perfect in order for a moon to host life. So maybe most intelligent species live underneath ice sheets that are miles deep so they can never leave or create technology like ours.