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The roots of Kzinti culture, language and history.
The Kzinti culture is both more homogenous
and richer than human culture. In a very real sense there
are not one but many human cultures, since civilization arose
not once but several times on earth, each time in complete
isolation and independence, separated by insurmountable geographic
barriers. By contrast, both linguistic, historical and (where
available) genetic evidence indicate that civilization arose
on Kzinhome only once. In geocultural terms, this can be explained
by Kzinhome's relatively small (~50%) percentage of water
cover and proportionally larger contiguous continental area,
combined with the smaller range of climactic conditions over
the non-polar regions of the planet. This is caused by the
denser atmosphere and the tropical wind belt phenomenon, which
acts to pump heat from the equator to the mid-latitudes. This
arrangement can be expected to have facilitated the movement
of trade and technology over isoclimatic lines with relative
rapidity. At some point relatively early in the civilization
cycle the primary Kzinti culture was established and thriving
planet wide. On genetic evidence it is certain that the Kzinti
species passed through a population bottleneck approximately
ten thousand generations ago for unknown reasons.
Given the evidence of a single start point
for Kzinti civilization we can argue that an evolutionary
stress caused the bottleneck and triggered runaway sexual
selection of intelligence with resultant rapid and concurrent
development of bi-quadrupedal posture, language and tool use
as species traits. It seems likely this stress was a massive
climatic shift brought about by the slight eccentricity in
Kzinhome's orbit caused by gravitational interactions with
the gas giant Hgrall. This posited orbital shift, occurring
approximately two hundred thousand years ago, would have increased
average solar flux, in turn increasing the average surface
temperature as much as 3 degrees Celsius, extending growing
seasons and accelerating the rate of water circulation through
the atmosphere and hydrosphere. The combination of these effects
formed extensive rainforests throughout the tropical and temperate
zones. Simultaneously large sections of the continental interiors
were reduced to desert. The higher rate of photosynthesis
has lead directly to the high (~30%) oxygen levels seen in
Kzinhome's atmosphere today. A general rule of planetary evolution
states that the average mass of animal species increases with
increased solar energy flux. This is due to both the greater
availability of food through increased plant growth, which
supports a heavier food chain, and the greater availability
of oxygen due to increased photosynthesis which allows the
high metabolic rates necessary for large, active animals to
exist.
Although humans are accustomed to seeing
the two metre Kzinti as large predators, in their native ecosystems
they are small in relation to most high order fauna in their
ecological range, small with respect to their primary prey
species and small with respect to other predators with which
they compete. Typically large land predators take prey no
more than twice their weight, and usually less than their
weight. By contrast, lone Kzinti will stalk and kill zerkitz
up to ten times their weight, and hunting parties will take
a'kdzrow of up to twenty five metric tons. In most cases where
evolutionary forces lead to an increase in prey species size
we expect to see the predator species increase along with
them. However in the case of the Kzinti the large predator
niches remained occupied by competitors such as the v'speel
stalker and the pack hunting grlor.
This suggests that the Kzinti were forced
into the intelligence niche because their customary prey animals
increased in size with the climate change but they themselves
could not because the large predator niches were already occupied.
As their prey grew larger the large predators flourished at
the expense of the smaller early pre-kzin, driving them to
the edge of extinction. This would have pushed the pre-kzin
towards the co-operative hunter niche, which requires the
development of complex signalling and a basic social structure.
These set the stage for the development of intelligence. This
picture is plausible but incomplete, and it is important to
understand that while the individual links in this chain of
reasoning are have all been verified, to the extent possible
through Kzinti documentation, the actual proof of the cause
and effect relationships asserted will have to await detailed
research on Kzinhome itself.
Regardless of the root causes of the genetic
bottleneck event the effects on Kzinti development are clear.
The Kzinti speak a single language, although there are many
dialects and extremely separated dialects have difficulty
communicating. Given the limits imposed by speed-of-light
communications in an interstellar empire, identical linguistic
groups have had ample time to diverge but have not. It could
be argued that this lack of linguistic flexibility is evidence
of a more instinctive, less flexible language facility, hinting
that Kzinti are less intelligent than humans. However the
Hero's Tongue is a fully combinatorial language in the sense
of Godel, ie a formal system capable of making statements
of arbitrary complexity. and there is therefore no thought
that cannot be expressed in the Hero's Tongue. Further, Kzinti
are gifted mathematicians, which again requires thought processes
capable of handling problems of arbitrary complexity. In addition,
both the language areas and visual cortex in the kzin brain
are highly developed and both larger and more finely structured
than in humans.
This last fact may provide an answer to the
puzzle of the Hero's Tongue's strange cohesion. It is known
that the kzin population is richer in telepathic adepts than
the human population, and it is known that the brain processes
used in telepathy make extensive use of both language and
visual circuits in humans. In the visual system this is known
to correspond to the high demands of the active predator ecological
niche. The low genetic diversity of the kzin race may have
facilitated the emergence of a telempathic sense due to the
high degree of correlation of thought and emotional processes
between individuals. There is then a natural evolutionary
pathway towards making use of the processing power of both
visual and language brain circuits in order to extract increasingly
detailed information from the telempathic sense. This development
can in turn have locked in those brain circuits to the demands
of telempathic processing. In the visual cortex these effects
may not be noticeable since the visual cortex is also locked
in to processing patterns which correspond to a verifiable
external reality, however there is no single "correct" combinatorial
language system, which leaves the language centres of the
brain free to select any of an infinite number of equally
valid symbol systems.
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