Photo by Caroline Legg/Flickr
but a brief shapeshift across the taxonomic gulf could help us better empathize
with animals...
When we attempt to understand other species, we often forget to ask ourselves this question. We rarely consider the nuts and bolts of how animals perceive their worlds, or what their experience of life might be like.
Instead, our approach is observational and human-centered:
Even the experts - the scientists who concern themselves with nonhuman animal cognition, such as animal behaviorists or behavioral ecologists - often fail to envisage how animals think.
I am one of them...
My job involves acquiring knowledge about the motivations of other species and making predictions about their behavior:
Through my work with these and other species, I've tried to understand how and why certain animals do what they do.
But my understanding was never based on how animals think. When I interpreted 'behavior' - an animal's response to a stimulus - it was always from a human perspective.
It involved posing questions, recording data, offering answers based on statistical probabilities and then making management or policy recommendations designed to improve the lives of other species or our interactions with them.
But recently, I have begun to feel there is something missing in this approach:
Increasingly, I want to understand what it is like, to paraphrase the writer and polymath Charles Foster,
how the otter thought. I wanted
to perceive its world...
We have come a long way since the early 17th century when René Descartes claimed that animals were unthinking organic 'machines' without intelligence or reason.
Today, it is clear that nonhuman organisms possess cognition, which the Oxford English Dictionary defines as,
Many species also experience affect - bodily feelings that precede emotions.
Some even express joy, love, despair or other
emotions.
This suggests that I might be able to conceive what it is like to have the brain of my cat, Fred, or experience something like the thoughts of the otter I observed one day in western Scotland.
As I watched it foraging on a seashore, I remember wanting to think how it thought. I wanted to perceive its world.
This desire was partly whimsical, of course, but also a serious attempt to shapeshift across a taxonomic gulf for the purpose of deeper understanding.
This is no mean feat for me...
Like many academics, I am a word-thinker, and nonhuman animals, as far as we know, do not form complex thoughts using language in the way that most humans do.
I started my search for answers by turning to literature.
A recent wave of semi-scientific books about 'the animal experience' seems to have made this subject more popular.
There are many others, including,
These authors have reported elegantly on scientific studies to show that,
But, invariably, the cues that other species use
to navigate, communicate and find food are not the same as ours.
fully explains how it feels to be inside the mind of
a badger, a swift, a praying
mantis...
Thomas Nagel posed that question in 1974 in his seminal essay (What Is It Like to Be a Bat?) of the same name, which attempted to align the worlds of humans and other species from a philosophical standpoint.
He suggested that human consciousness cannot be compared to the consciousness of bats.
And there are many other parallel sensory worlds.
Consider antennation, where insects
(including ants) tap each other's antennae, or scent communication
where badgers, hyaenas, dogs and other mammals use feces to 'talk'
with one another.
But those limitations don't stop us from knowing something meaningful about how other animals think.
Research on animal cognition has shown that most nonhuman species give and receive signals that direct their interactions with each other and with their external environment in a variety of ways.
The neuronal circuits involved in these
interactions have been documented in studies. Yet, none of this
scientific research fully explains how it feels to be inside the
mind of a badger, a swift, a praying mantis.
Nonetheless, not all humans think predominantly in words, a fact that is becoming increasingly clear as we learn to understand and celebrate neurodivergence.
Temple Grandin, a prominent animal behavior scientist and livestock welfare researcher, who is also autistic, has presented a compelling case that certain species, such as 'higher' mammals, think in patterns or icons rather than words.
Grandin herself thinks in pictures as well as
words, so can presumably envisage this better than I.
We do it too:
We humans use language to communicate, but
we also use it to make sense of ourselves and our lives via
internal narratives.
I have caught the tendrils of this thought-consciousness
without language...
It is called the default mode network (DMN).
This collection of brain regions becomes more active when we stop focusing on specific tasks or the outside world.
Linked brain structures broadly comparable to the DMN have been found in rats, mice and nonhuman primates, but there are fewer connections between the brain regions of these animals.
In other words,
Perhaps then, we can mimic aspects of animal thought by quieting the DMN in our own minds.
Luckily, a suite of techniques exist - in the
form of meditation and other mindfulness practices -
that humans have used for centuries to calm the chattering of our
minds.
And I believe this experience may be similar - perhaps only for a few seconds - to the thinking of my feline friend Fred or that foraging otter I once watched on the Scottish coastline.
Ironically, learning to focus on how we inhabit
our human bodies in the present moment may be a way of glimpsing
what it is like to experience the world as a badger, a swift or even
a praying mantis.
In 'What Is It Like to Be a Bat?', Nagel concluded that,
I disagree...
I say we keep trying - I say we keep finding new ways of becoming more empathic towards animals and understanding their needs better.
Perhaps by learning to quieten the
wordy chattering of our DMN, even for a brief moment, we can
enter an unfamiliar sensory world and begin to experience what it is
like to be another species...
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