It was actually the dominant default in natural science up into the early 70s. If you officially and/or in papers referred to animals and having motivations, consciousness, desires, etc. you were putting your career on the line. It wasn't exactly that the line was they don't have it, but the default was we don't know and people are confused if they think we do. You could say scientists were allowed to be behaviorists and talk perhaps about drives, but not to assume animals were experiencers.Does anyone in the west think that animals are soulless automatons nowadays? From that whole discussion around Descartes that we had, it seemed that that wasn't close to a dominant view even centuries ago. — Lionino
Can you hear the bigotry in the phrase "the scientific attitude"? Do you not recognize scientists as individuals? — wonderer1
Note that in 71 it was consider a question.¨Donald Griffin: He was an influential figure in the study of animal cognition. In the 1970s, Griffin published "The Question of Animal Awareness," which argued for animal consciousness and challenged behaviorist views.
https://www.fondation-droit-animal.org/proceedings-aw/animal-welfare-a-brief-history/Although the foundation was now in place, the emergence of modern animal welfare science was delayed through the first 70 years of the 20th century by Behaviorism, which eschewed any consideration of subjective experiences. It took a controversial book by a layperson, Ruth Harrison, to stir both the scientific and philosophical community into developing theories of animal welfare and a book by an ethologist, Donald Griffin, to make it acceptable to study the feelings of animals.
Well, you provided not evidence for your claim. — Bylaw
But the evidence I found was through https://www.amazon.com/When-Elephants-Weep-Emotional-Animals/dp/0385314280 and his references/sources — Bylaw
Not since Darwin's The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals has a book so thoroughly and effectively explored the full range of emotions that exist throughout the animal kingdom.
The Dog, various expressive movements of—Cats—Horses—Ruminants—Monkeys, their expression of joy and affection—Of pain—Anger—Astonishment and terror. — The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, Chapter 5
They also often give their puppies, after a short absence, a few cursory licks, apparently from affection. Thus the habit will have become associated with the emotion of love — The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, Chapter 5
The feeling of affection of a dog towards his master is combined with a strong sense of submission, which is akin to fear. — The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, Chapter 5
This abstract gives a hint.
https://rsawa.research.ucla.edu/arc/subject-experience-animals/ — Bylaw
If I ask various AI online they agree that it was taboo to assert that animals had subjective experience before the 60s and 70s and mention things like this — Bylaw
What's the dubious definition of rationality to do with experience? — Vera Mont
Only that rationality and language allow you to reflect on experience, to make it the subject of conscious deliberation and analysis, as well as simply feeling it. — Wayfarer
That much-vaunted human language ain't so unique either. Practically every vertebrate communicates in a way that is intelligible to other members of its species. — Vera Mont
(There is) a radical dissimilarity between all animal communication systems and human language. The former are based entirely on “linear order,” whereas the latter is based on hierarchical syntax. In particular, human language involves the capacity to generate, by a recursive procedure, an unlimited number of hierarchically structured sentences. A trivial example of such a sentence is this: “How many cars did you tell your friends that they should tell their friends . . . that they should tell the mechanics to fix?” (The ellipses indicate that the number of levels in the hierarchy can be extended without limit.) Notice that the word “fix” goes with “cars,” rather than with “friends” or “mechanics,” even though “cars” is farther apart from “fix” in linear distance. The mind recognizes the connection, because “cars” and “fix” are at the same level in the sentence’s hierarchy. A more interesting example given in the book is the sentence “Birds that fly instinctively swim.” The adverb “instinctively” can modify either “fly” or “swim.” But there is no ambiguity in the sentence “Instinctively birds that fly swim.” Here “instinctively” must modify “swim,” despite its greater linear distance.
Animal communication can be quite intricate. For example, some species of “vocal-learning” songbirds, notably Bengalese finches and European starlings, compose songs that are long and complex. But in every case, animal communication has been found to be based on rules of linear order. Attempts to teach Bengalese finches songs with hierarchical syntax have failed. The same is true of attempts to teach sign language to apes. Though the famous chimp Nim Chimpsky was able to learn 125 signs of American Sign Language, careful study of the data has shown that his “language” was purely associative and never got beyond memorized two-word combinations with no hierarchical structure.
In a second language. (I've known a dog who learned German and later English) Most of ours also spoke fluent feline. Dogs are - of course! - expected to and do learn our words, but we don't all make any effort to learn theirs.one of ours had quite a large 'vocabulary' — Wayfarer
Did the first two humans communicate in a language with hierarchical syntax - or were they freak chimps talking linear and their children, and great-great-great-great grandchildren evolve less hair and more complexity of speech? — Vera Mont
Agree that humans and other species are on a biological continuum, but I also believe that humans crossed a threshold with the advent of language, tool use, and so on, and that it is a highly signficant difference, that though we're related to other animals, we're more than 'just animals'. — Wayfarer
Please explain what you mean by "ontological gap", and why you think our existence is of a different kind to the other animals, as opposed to merely our perceptions and experience being different.
I acknowledge that due to the acquisition of symbolic language that humans are capable of a kind of linguistically mediated memory and self-reflection that animals would presumably not be. But how would that amount to an ontological difference rather than just a different mode of consciousness? — Janus
Schumacher agrees with the view that there are four kingdoms: Mineral, Plant, Animal, Human. He argues that there are important differences of kind between each level of being. Between mineral and plant is the phenomenon of life. Schumacher says that although scientists say we should not use the phrase 'life energy', the difference between inorganic and organic matter still exists and has not been explained by science to the extent of rendering said phrase fully invalid. Schumacher points out that though we can recognize life and destroy it, we can't create it. Schumacher notes that the 'life sciences' are 'extraordinary' because they hardly ever deal with life as such, and instead content themselves with analyzing the "physico-chemical body which is life's carrier." Schumacher goes on to say there is nothing in physics or chemistry to explain the phenomenon of life.
For Schumacher, a similar jump in level of being takes place between plant and animal, which is differentiated by the phenomenon of consciousness. We can recognize consciousness, not least because we can knock an animal unconscious, but also because animals exhibit at minimum primitive thought and intelligence.
The next level, according to Schumacher, is between Animal and Human, which are differentiated by the phenomenon of self-consciousness or self-awareness. Self-consciousness is the reflective awareness of one's consciousness and thoughts.
Schumacher realizes that the terms—life, consciousness and self-consciousness—are subject to misinterpretation so he suggests that the differences can best be expressed as an equation which can be written thus:
"Mineral" = m
"Plant" = m + x
"Animal" = m + x + y
"Human" = m + x + y + z
In his theory, these three factors (x, y and z) represent ontological discontinuities — Wikipedia
In more traditional terms, ontology is usually associated with metaphysics and questions about the meaning of being. — Wayfarer
In this case, I think the differences between humans and other animals are manifold. Apart from language and rational ability, there's also abstract skills like mathematical reasoning, art and science. — Wayfarer
We're also existential animals - we have a grasp of our own mortality that is generally absent in other creatures (although mention might be made of elephants who seem to have quite a vivid awareness of death.) — Wayfarer
Plainly humans are biological phenomena, but I argue, and I think Schumacher would argue, we're under-determined by biology in a sense that other animals cannot be. Of course, I also think that is the original intuition behind philosophical dualism, such as that of the Phaedo, and whilst I don't agree that such dualisms are literal descriptions, nevertheless they convey something symbolically real about human nature. — Wayfarer
As I understand it ontology is concerned with the nature of being and with the different kinds of entities. — Janus
There are things I would argue with but it makes sense to me. I think there's plainly an ontological discontinuity between the mineral and organic domains, and so on for the other domains. — Wayfarer
Agree that humans and other species are on a biological continuum, but I also believe that humans crossed a threshold with the advent of language, tool use, and so on, and that it is a highly signficant difference, that though we're related to other animals, we're more than 'just animals'. — Wayfarer
If it were, the priests are still there to set us straight: "just animals" have no souls.And I think this is something mostly lost sight of in many naturalist accounts of humanity. — Wayfarer
Here's a collection of human artifacts, the likes of which could have been constructed by no other animal: — Wayfarer
Agree that humans and other species are on a biological continuum, but I also believe that humans crossed a threshold with the advent of language, tool use, and so on, and that it is a highly signficant difference, that though we're related to other animals, we're more than 'just animals'. — Wayfarer
That's a very interesting anthropological question. It wasn't easy to divide early hominids into classes, and even for a very long period into the species definitely identified as human, we have very few clues as to their thinking. We see rock art and cave art, but can't really know what it meant to the people who made them, or how they regarded themselves or their place in the animal kingdom. Remnants of early mythology (that is, well within the last 50,000 years or so) suggest a respectful attitude toward other species as well as overlap between the human, the animal and the divine spheres.Is it the case that we, as human beings, have subjectively decided to say that we are different (perhaps referring to human intellect), and that our minds have produced some sort of mental, or psychological threshold, or barrier, — Metaphysician Undercover
That wouldn't wash; there are a dozen or more similar hands, and not merely among primates: it includes rats, raccoons and lizards.or is it the case that there is real physical principles (opposing thumb?) which supports your claim of a threshold?
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.