No
That we evolved from monkeys.
No, monkeys are another evolutionary branch from humans. They are closely related but not the same.
Harry Harlow was an American psychologist best know for studying the effects of isolation on macaque and rhesus monkeys. In these controversial experiments Harlow removed infant monkeys from their mothers and denied them physical contact with other monkeys for up to two years.
Harry Harlow
Monkeys are native to regions like Africa, Asia, and South America due to evolutionary factors. North America did not have the same environmental conditions and evolutionary history that allowed monkeys to develop and thrive in the region. Therefore, no monkeys are native to North America.
Yes, monkeys and humans share a significant amount of DNA due to their evolutionary relationship. On average, humans share about 93 of their DNA with monkeys.
We aren't actually directly descended from monkeys, they're just cousins in evolutionary terms, as we are part of the same evolutionary chain. We are merely the most recent major evolutionary step in the primate family, so much so that we are barely a part of the family anymore, but we are more closely related to apes then we are monkeys. The difference betweens apes and monkeys generally being apes don't have tails, monkeys do, albeit we do have the base for a tailbone still.
Harry Harlow, an American psychologist, conducted research on maternal deprivation and social isolation in rhesus monkeys. He found that monkeys preferred a soft, comforting surrogate mother over one that provided food, demonstrating the importance of social contact and comfort in early development.
Monkeys do not directly evolve into humans. However, humans and monkeys do share a common ancestor. Over millions of years, evolutionary processes led to the development of different species, with humans evolving separately from monkeys. The evolutionary path that led to modern humans involved significant changes in brain size, tool use, and social behavior.
i don't know and i don't care! actually i do care :)
We are evolutionary relatives. We shared a last common ancestor with New World Monkeys around 40 million years ago and a last common ancestor with Old World Monkeys around 25 million years ago.
If you are referring to an increase in overall intelligence during the course of evolution then you have mistaken monkeys for apes as the evolutionary source of humanity. Monkeys were monkeys a long time ago, while some apes did evolve into the humans of today. To find a simple difference between them, look for a tail. Monkeys have tails and apes do not.