stevehw33: <br />ants have no knowledge or data base of any kind. their behaviors are instinctual, alone... <br /><br />Me: <br />IMO, we really don't know the level of intelligence any creature besides us possesses. Ants act in social groups, and have at least enough awareness to be one of the few species to build their own dwellings which requires data processing albiet at the lowest percieved by us, level. <br /><br />Due to our lack of knowledge in this area, the idea that either species is more aware than the other is one that cannot be ever known. The vast majority of people its often said, cannot possibly comprehend the vast distances that are a part of the Universe. We know its there, we know its big, and we know something of its structure and chemistry. <br /><br />Ants know what surround them is big and there, but maybe not know chemistry and structure because they have no tools to gain that knowledge as far as we can determine...it may simply be that they know in a way foreign to us. And maybe, or probably they don't know at all. But until we can communicate with other creatures, we will never know how intelligent and self aware they may really be. What we call instinct may well be evidence of that self awareness. We call it instinct because we don't know enough about it to call it anything else. <br /><br />If an ant detects a predator, it seems to be self aware enough to know its butts in trouble. We see that as instinct, but instinct is such a general term.<br /><br />To answer the question posed by this thread, its unanswerable beyond opinion. <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p><strong>My borrowed quote for the time being:</strong></p><p><em>There are three kinds of people in life. Those who make it happen, those who watch it happen...and those who do not know what happened.</em></p> </div>