To be fair, I'm with @thecoshman's intuition: I think it's random and natural selection has emphasized that it was good to avoid heat. Things like proteines that damage or whatnot. Things that, in general, are not conducive to healthy cells.
I can't prove it or even make it plausible, but this is what I'd have assumed a logical splanation. And (if I got it right) the pirate too.
@LucDanton Yeah. Well, I don't know whether there are many species who have successfully developed avoidance from that (as opposed to simple resilience). It could well be about that pace you mentioned.
Cells break down due to radiation, but the effects are mainly long term. If life expectancy is short, things like cancer don't dominate survival rates as easily
@thecoshman not any more. Don't forget the scale of evolution. It doesn't make sense to explain evolution with conscious brains that have only existed for a tiny fraction of the last era of evolution
@LucDanton species have consisted of the same kind of organic cells (that are only mildly sensitive to harmful radiation) for waaaaay longer than eyes have existed.
@AngryLettuce kinda weird isn’t it? although that being said I actually don’t know which mechanism is at play when e.g. feeling too hot, might be the same
dehydration kills basically every life we know off, or at least puts it pause. Life avoid worrying about drinking for a loooong time by just staying in the wet stuff
@thecoshman That's true. When you first said it I assumed that Luc was pushing back because he knew something, but in absense of that I'm still with you on that.
Early snake-like things RANDOMLY evolved venom, they took of as species because they could kill shit to eat (thus let them have more babies, and good music). Later some species of snake RANDOMLY evolved to use constriction, other's evolved other tricks too. Some of the constrictors RANDOMLY evolved not wasting energy on making venom they don't use.
@sehe Some are as you said, just thrive in those environs, others, which of course I don't know the latin names for, the seed actually requires the seeds to be burnt out; this is how the sees 'knows' a fire has happened and they can start being a TREEEEE!!!
@LucDanton Your question isn't "why did animals learn that fire is bad" but "why did that knowledge that fire is bad develop into a pain response", right?
I asked on several occasions what sort of heat danger an animal would run into :( fires were pointed out but we don’t know for sure on that front (it’s certainly appealing though)
@LucDanton Given how universal it seems to be to sense heat and attempt to find a comfortable heat level, it seems to be like it probably goes back to relatively early animals, and may easily have been originally used for things like "stay out of the volcano".
Bushfires in Australia are frequent events during the hotter months of the year, due to Australia's mostly hot, dry climate. Each year, such fires impact extensive areas. While they can cause property damage and loss of human life, certain native flora in Australia have evolved to rely on bushfires as a means of reproduction, and fire events are an interwoven and an essential part of the ecology of the continent. For thousands of years, Indigenous Australians have used fire to foster grasslands for hunting and to clear tracks through dense bush.
Major firestorms that result in severe loss of life...
@AngryLettuce insolation is another one by the way
@AngryLettuce I’m not doubting or assuming anything regarding prevalence
I don’t know anything about that prevalence (I’m looking up the aforementioned WP page), and I don’t know anything that would connect prevalence to evolution
@AngryLettuce also, pain reflexes don't do anything against lightning strike
@AngryLettuce dehydration was a good point IMO - applies to sun heat and ground radiation. If you learn to avoid the heat you can go with less water for longer
fire kills and that's a fact being dead is not good for reproduction therefore animals that learn to avoid fire would have an advantage over those who don't
@LucDanton they can cooperate. Why can't the heat sensing contribute to better survival? You don't have to wait until you notice you used more water. You can avoid that when you sense the heat
@sehe originally it also included "and under the assumption that it was beneficial to some previous species, how come is that still there" (which we found partial answers to, so that’s just for the record)
@AngryLettuce well, you almost decided to mansplain babby Lamarck's first theory of evolution so if you truly believe in yourself then I guess you can achieve anything you want
@VillasV well the nociceptors that fire(hah) when you burn yourself on a hot stove are the very same that trigger when you’re feeling hot, so there’s an obvious benefit to the organism here
hell, even human balls are sensitive to temperature. There's an optimal temperature for sperm generation, that's why we evolved an external sack for them.
@LucDanton There's a theory that life originated around deep-sea vents. The consequences of getting too close to the outlet there would be quite the biological incentive to avoid heat.
great paper on the philogenetics of nociception, not done with it but it brings up sea anemones that may react to contact, but do not react to temperature (i.e. definitively no thermal nociception)
@jaggedSpire how fortuitous
well, I really have no idea how deep sea anemones live lol
well, it’s just the one anemone :) we’re actually looking for the opposite, when we can say for sure there is or was thermal nociception—at least we have an upper bound of sorts now
@AngryLettuce do I? it’s not like I trust what I’m reading right now and/or plan on replicating their findings (or rather, the findings they are themselves reporting—this is how removed this all is)
well you are questioning the basic, common group go-to instinct, so yes, you are looking for something more in-depth which is afaik out of reach of this room
@AngryLettuce I’m kinda lost on the instinct thing but for the latter point yeah, I don’t expect to find an answer to everything I ask, immediately
I’m curious and want to sate the curiosity so why not try? maybe somebody does know something about it, or maybe they’re not and they’ll find the question interesting as well