But the human species does what it does with the abilities it has because it has been lucky enough to have had the random mutations which have produced those abilities. Other species cannot choose to have those mutations.
ty.
Susan
I think that sums it up. In fact, I think we see these kinds of phenomena paralleled many times in evolution. Sometimes a mutation will produce a particular life form with a considerable potential for variation, and other mutations will produce a life form which has little innate capacity to adapt and evolve, which will then lead to its evolutionary stagnation and likely eventual extinction.
There are certain life-forms, such as the coelocanth, which appear to have all the potential for setting off a whole new line of evolutionary development (in this case the evolution of amphibians). I believe that looking to the coelocanth as the origin of amphibians has now been abandoned by biology - though new fossil evidence may turn up. This 'walking fish' however, seems to have just taken to a life of evolutionary stasis, since various examples kept turning up in the nets of 20th century fishermen in the Indian ? ocean. These specimens appear to have differed little from their prehistoric ancestors, apart from some adaption to deep sea conditions, where it seems to have found a comfortable niche. Likewise the crocodile, which seems to have evolved little from the forms of its historic ancestors.
Where the ancestry of humans is concerned, we see a plethora of evolutionary 'experiments', particularly with the development of the many varieties of Australopithecines in Africa - a number of species having lived contemporaneously. Some like A. robustus prospered for a considerable time, but eventually became extinct (were they perhaps hunted for food by the gracile Australopithecines, one type of which -A afarensis - probably launched the line to Homo sapiens?) The presence of so many species of "Ape-men" suggests that the genetic mutations that had produced them had considerable potential for diversification.
Whereas their distant cousins among the other higher primates had long been 'condemned' to evolutionary stasis by their particular genetic makeup. Some scientists trace the ancestry of chimps and gorillas to the Miocene apes (Dryopithecus?), and I'd say it is a fair speculation that the life style of these modern primates is not so very different from their ancient ancestor. The mutation that produced them had not much capacity for variation, and evolutionary stasis is the result. And likely extinction as their environment becomes more and more threatened.
My own speculations (riffing on the ideas of Steven Mithen).