Neomega said:You say it is the same, yet obviously it is not. The mouse is reacting based on it's own experience. The soldier reacts based on the experience and interactions of others... interaction with other brains.
As I have stated, language, and the ability to pass on this language, many times trumps genetics. The soldier who jumps on a grenade, is for all intents and purposes, a fool. But he has been taught that fighting his instincts is good, productive... "honourable". Do animals have any of these senses? Absolutely not. And I have never seen a male zebra charge a lion on nature shows. In fact, they all tend to run together.... evolution has made behave this way, and even gave them stripes to help.
Speaking of interacting with other brains, we can use the example of the baboon - the prime male will direct younger male baboons in shifts to sit high up in a tree to watch for leopards and give enough warning that the rest of them can get into the trees in time. I don't know of an observed case where a baboon has sacrificed himself for everyone else, but it is certainly an example of interacting with other brains.
I also consider developed language to be the spark of civilization. I think farming was probably a result of populations hitting critical mass where they could not readily live off the land any more and had to cultivate additional food.