ASK THE ANIMALS AND THE WILL TELL YOU:
A LOOK AT ANIMAL SENTIENCE
PART THREE: ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE
“Crows hold a grudge,
and they are big gossips.” ~ Prof. David Craig
“Mice value
self-actualizaton.” ~ Dr. Jonathan Balcombe
In Part One of this series on animal sentience we looked
at animals and physical pain. In PartTwo, we looked at animals and emotions.
In this Part Three, we’ll take a look at animal intelligence. Humans have consistently underestimated
animal intelligence and awareness of the world around them. We tend to believe that animals go through
life with very little understanding of what is happening around them,
responding to their environment instinctively.
It turns out, however, that animals are much more intelligent than we
have previously believed. They make
choices, they have preferences, they plan for the future and remember the past,
and, just like humans, they suffer from boredom if they do not have enough to
occupy them. These realities have an impact on what it means to treat animals humanely and what our obligations of right dominion include.
In considering our obligations to our fellow creatures,
however, it is important to remember, as Marc Bekoff cautions, that “[i]ntelligence
and suffering are not necessarily correlated, and clever animals don’t suffer
more than less clever individuals. . .
. even if animals don’t know who they
are, they can still suffer, they can still be aware of their feelings, and they
can still clearly tell us and other animals what they want and what they don’t
want.”[1] Likewise, Jonathan Balcombe tells us that “a
less intelligent animal may experience life no less richly than a human, in the
sensory realms.”[2]
Moreover, he continues, “[i]n the emotional
domain, it is far from clear that a monkey’s or a rabbit’s fear is felt less
acutely than our own fear, or that feelings of affection, and subsequent grief
at their loss, are duller between two parrots who mate for life than such
feelings between two humans.”[3] Yet, while intelligence is not necessary
to suffering and we should not assume that because an animal is less
intelligent it suffers less, still, understanding the intellectual capacities
of animals helps us to understand what their lives are like, so that we can
better understand our obligations to care for them in our exercise of
dominion.
Balcombe explains that it is difficult to compare the
intelligence of different kinds of animals, including the intelligence of
nonhumans with humans. It is like
comparing the way animals move. “Do fish
move better than horses? . . . Animals
are as intelligent as they need to be.”[4] Stories and study results demonstrating
animals’ reason, memory, problem-solving, and intelligence abound, involving
animals from chimps and dolphins to birds, fish and mice. Balcombe observes: “[w]hen animals show the
hallmarks of having a mind and thinking about things, down tumbles one of the
most insidious and destructive ideas of all time: that you need language to think.”[5],[6] For instance, many animals think about and
plan for the future. Bekoff again:
… there are
literally volumes of data showing that individuals of many species do think
about the future, from Mexican jays, red foxes, and wolves caching feed for
later retrieval, to a subordinate chimpanzee or wolf pretending that he doesn’t
see a favored food item in the presence of a dominant individual and later
returning to eat it when the dominant animal is not around.”[7]
Laboratory mice (who, as you will recall, are not
considered “animals” under laws governing the treatment of laboratory animals,
and so lack even minimal protection from abuse) have demonstrated significant
intelligence, learning extremely complex mazes in little time with no
associated deprivation or reward and have shown “an almost obstinate insistence
on exercising control over their environment.”[8]
Balcombe recounts one experiment in which the scientist “noticed that the mice
tended to resist ‘with astonishing vigor’ being forced to do something. . . .
The conclusion: mice value self-actualizaton.”[9]
Crows have also demonstrated significant intelligence. For example, they make tools to solve
problems.[10] Watch this video to see a crow using a hook to get food out of a tube.
They also teach others in the flock and their young how to make and use tools once they have solved a problem. Some scientists believe they may even be better at tool use than chimps.[11] They also recognize individual humans, remember them for years, and can distinguish between those who are friendly and those who are dangerous, and they pass along their knowledge to others. “Crows hold a grudge, and they are big gossips,” says Professor David Craig, co-author of the crow study, which appeared in Animal Behavior magazine, “They spread the information around. If you're bad to one crow, many more may hear about it.”[12]
They also teach others in the flock and their young how to make and use tools once they have solved a problem. Some scientists believe they may even be better at tool use than chimps.[11] They also recognize individual humans, remember them for years, and can distinguish between those who are friendly and those who are dangerous, and they pass along their knowledge to others. “Crows hold a grudge, and they are big gossips,” says Professor David Craig, co-author of the crow study, which appeared in Animal Behavior magazine, “They spread the information around. If you're bad to one crow, many more may hear about it.”[12]
Moreover, many animals depend on a complex social
structure for their well-being. These
animals display a sense of fair play and know right from wrong, in the sense of
knowing what is expected among members of the group. They may not philosophize about universal
truths or the meaning of life, but they understand the rules by which they are
expected to conduct themselves in the setting in which they operate. In order to succeed within their groups, they
need what Bekoff, describes as “morality,” which requires “cooperation,
reciprocity, empathy, and helping.”[13] Animal play “appears to rely on the universal
human value of the Golden Rule – do unto others as you would have them do to
you.”[14] This, he explains, requires empathy and
implies reciprocity. It also requires a
sense of “fairness,” so when animals play together, those of greater size,
strength, or social status, do not take advantage of those assets.[15]
Balcombe likewise explains that animals
will “self-handicap” in play, so as not to be unfairly matched with a play
partner.[16]
Those who do well in play tend to be those who do well in the social
setting. Those who disregard the rules
are not invited to play again.[17]
The animal kingdom, Bekoff, Balcombe, and others have concluded, has more to do
with cooperation than competition.
All of this demonstrates that animals are very much
involved in their surroundings. They are
engaged. Treating animals humanely,
therefore, includes the obligation to ensure that animals have surroundings
that keep them engaged, give them things to do, and allow them to use their
brains and their skills. Keeping animals
isolated in barren cages, for example, is its own special cruelty, wholly apart
from whether the animal is in physical pain.
Yet it is a cruelty endured by so many animals in labs, in
zoos, in circuses, factory farms, and other places. God has created the animals with rich
capacities for exploring the world He created.
As God’s representative to these creatures, we must allow them to use those capacities. He created the animals – as he created humans
– for joy and abundance. We do Him and
the animals – and ourselves – such a great disservice when we strip their lives
to the minimal requirements for existence and then snuff out even that without
so much as a thought.
We have a long way to go to do the job God has given us.
________________
Photo credits:
Rabbits: By Camilo Gonzalez (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Crow: By Kkohli613 (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Dogs playing: By Les Chatfield from Brighton, England (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
________________
Photo credits:
Rabbits: By Camilo Gonzalez (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Crow: By Kkohli613 (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Dogs playing: By Les Chatfield from Brighton, England (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
[1] Bekoff, Marc. The Emotional Lives of Animals. Novato: New World
Library, 2007, p. 28.
[2] Balcombe, Jonathan. Second
Nature. New York: Palgrave Macmillan,
2010, p. 16.
[3] Balcombe p. 16.
[4] Balcombe, p. 31. He also notes that in some cases, nonhumans
are “smarter” than humans. In Japan, one
study of cognition using chimpanzees required chimps to recall in sequence the
numbers 1 through 9 randomly scattered on a computer screen. One particular chimp excelled at this,
regularly getting the entire sequence correct.
“Humans barely pass the test with just four or five numbers.” In a
head-to-head competition with a human memory champion, “the chimp performed
three times better.” Even “the average chimp scores twice as well as the
average human on this short-term memory task” (32-33).
[5] Balcombe, pp. 43-44.
Dr. Temple Grandin believes that animals think in the same way autistic
people, such as Grandin herself, think: in visual images rather than words.
(Scully, 244-45; Grandin, Thinking the
Way Animals Do, Western Horseman, Nov. 1997, pp.140-145, http://www.grandin.com/references/thinking.animals.html.
[6] Descarte made clear that
this limitation was not, in his view (or in the views of many influenced by
him), restricted to the ability to think abstractly. He asserted that it was clear that animals
have no thoughts, and no ability to reason, at all. See my earlier post, Why Has The Church Traditionally Taken A Different View?
[7] Bekoff, p. 14.
[8] Balcombe, p. 26.
[9] Balcombe., pp. 26-27.
[10] A. A. S. Weir, J. Chappell, A. Kacelnik, “Shaping
of Hooks in New Caledonian Crows,” Science
Magazine, 2002, http://www.sciencemag.org/site/feature/data/crow/; video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtmLVP0HvDg.
[11] John Pickrell, “Crows
Better at Tool Building Than Chimps, Study Says,” National GeographicMagazine, April 23, 2003, http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/04/0423_030423_crowtools.html.
[12] Williamette University
website, “Research Finds Crows Recognize and Remember Human Faces,” http://www.willamette.edu/people/archives/2010/02/crows.html.
[13] Bekoff, p. 88. He distinguishes between morality, which he
describes as “an essentially social
phenomenon: it arises in the interactions between and among individuals, and it
exists as a kind of webbing or social fabric that holds together a complicated
tapestry of social relationships,” and ethics, which he views as suggesting
“the contemplative study of subtle questions of rightness or fairness.” Bekoff is “arguing that some animals have
moral codes of behavior, but not that animals have ethics” (88, emphasis
original).
[14] Bekoff, p. 87.
[15] Bekoff, pp. 87-96.
[16] Balcombe, pp. 129-30.
[17] Bekoff, p. 87.
1 comment:
Yes indeed.....a long way to go...... Thanks for the post!
Kathy Dunn
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