Who're the 3 animals most intelligent of the world?
Answers:
Chimps, dolphins and elephants
Hi. Humans, chimps, dolphins. but not necessarily in that order.
border collies, dolphins and portia spiders
dogs, puppies, and dogs
Monkeys, Ants, and Dolphins
my dog
my aunties cat
my best friends goldfish
elephant, spider
dog
spider -cause she eats her mate when shes finished with him
1. dolphin
2. chimp or bonono (NOT monkey or gorilla)
3. humans
4. if humans don't count: apes or monkies
Marina chillllllllllllll! geezzzzzzzz i'll answer this mess,first eleaphont, rooster.ducks,pigs,dogs,birds,. those freaking Sharks!!!!!!!!!!
Huey, Dewey and Louey.
there's probably more.
apes
whales
dolphins
dogs
pigs
cats
and i suppose man,
if/when he puts his mind 2 it.
Rag tag and bobtail
Apes, Dolphins, and as of October of 2006, elephants. Presumptly, a high accordance of intelligence is set to animals who can recognize themselves from their reflection of mirrors. No other organisms other than these three and of course humans, are capable of doing this. It's possible though that dinosaurs, especially those that roamed the oceans, lakes, or ponds, also had a high degree of intelligency.
Depends on what type of intelligence.
Dolphins, chimps, elephants
Octopus are considered the most intelligent invertebrates.
cats, dolphins, elefants
Human beings, Orang Utans and Chimpanzees.
According to Douglas Adams, Mice are the most intelligent, then Dolphins, then Us.
Dolphins ,pigs and chimps.
dog cat, pigeon birds of prey
monkeys, dolphins and elephants it seems
most intelligent: dogs
least intelligent: humans (cos we have the most advanced brains but still do the stupidest things, like killing each other)
According to scientists the order of Intelligence (The capacity to acquire and apply knowledge) is as follows:
Human
Apes and Monkeys
Ocean Mammals (Dolphins and Whales being the most Intelligent)
Flesh Eating Mammals (Cats, Dogs, Bears, Lions, Tigers, and Wolves)
Hoofed Animals (Elephant, Horse, and Pig)
Rodents (Squirrel)
Birds (Raven, Pigeon, and Parrots)
Amphibians and Reptiles
Fish
Animals without Backbones
Hope this helps
Elephant...Dolphin...Human
The actual answer is from smartest first: Humans, Bigfoot, then maybe one of the Chimpanzees such as bonobos
Yeti, Bigfoot, and Nessie. They realise that contact with humans is to be avoided at all costs!
Stephen Hawking
Heinz Wolff
Carol Vorderman
Human being ''Dogs''and Fox
How do you define intelligence? It is suggested that having a sense of self (being able to recognise that you exist as an independant being) is one good way of defining 'intelligence'. A fundamental feature of cognition is the ability to separate self from others, or to recognize oneself as an entity, separate from the environment. This issue of the internal nature of self-representation is difficult to get at experimentally, and really one one approach has been used successfully. This approach uses a mirror and markings.
When your dog or cat walks past a mirror, it may respond to the image in the mirror, but the it does not recognize the image as itself. This can lead to a humorous escalation in play or aggression, depending on the predisposition of your animal. If you put a piece of pet clothing on the dog or cat--a collar, a hat, or a sweater--your pet's perception of the image in the mirror does not change. This clearly differentiates self-awareness in dogs or cats from human self-awareness.
But what about other animals? In chimpanzees, perhaps a few other primates, killer whales, and bottlnose dophins, changing the image in the mirror causes the animal to behave in a way that suggests self-recognition. In chimpanzees, marking the chimp with a spot of paint or dye will cause the chimp to, when viewing the image, touch the marked spot. This suggests that the chimp sees the image in the mirror as itself, and that it can recognize the change in itself by exploring that change. Marine mammals, of course, lack appendages for self-exploration, but at least a few marine mammals show behavioral responses to changed mirror images that suggest self-recognition.
Seyfarth and Cheney (2000) argue that monkeys which fail the mirror test (for example, vervets, baboons, or macaques) still have a sense of "social self" defined by their ability to recognize other members of their social group as individuals, to remember the gender and dominance status of those other animals, and to define their place in the social order accordingly.
Humans, dolphins and Jeremy Paxman (he's a different species to the rest of us).
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