yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

What evidence is there that animals are conscious beings? | Frans de Waal | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Well, my cynical reaction to questions about consciousness is, "You tell me what it is, and I tell you if an elephant has it." And that usually shuts people up, because you will not be able to tell me what it is and how I should measure it. That is not a good reaction, because I actually believe that animals have some level of consciousness.

So for example, the approach that I sometimes take is that there are certain things that we humans cannot do without consciousness. If we find these kind of actions also in other species, we must assume that they also involve consciousness. So for example, you cannot plan a party for tomorrow for your friends without consciously thinking about how much beer you need, what kind of music you're going to play, who's going to be invited. You have to consciously think about the event before you can plan it.

Now we have very good evidence that animals can plan. We have lots of experiments now on it. And we have nature observations. For example, chimpanzees will collect tools on one location and then walk for three miles. And so then an hour later, they're going to use these tools to fish for termites or to open a beehive, meaning that they probably had been planning the action.

And we test that out in the laboratory. And we have evidence for planning in birds, for planning in apes. So if they can plan, and we plan consciously, it's very hard to imagine that they can do these same things that we do unconsciously. I find that hard to imagine.

We have other things, like thinking back in time, thinking back to events that happened a year ago. Can you do that? We have now ways of testing that it's called episodic memory in animals. And animals have that capacity. You cannot think back to a specific event in time, let's say your wedding or whatever it is, you cannot think back to a specific event without consciously thinking about that.

And so there are certain things that animals do and that we have now evidence for that require in humans consciousness, and I think that's a good indicator that the animals must also have that kind of consciousness.

More Articles

View All
Designing Characters with Deep Learning: Spellbrush (W18) - YC Gaming Tech Talks 2020
My name is Corey; I’m the CEO at Spell Rush, and I’m here to talk to you today about designing characters with deep learning. So, um, we’re Spell Rush. We’re a YC company as well; we’re building deep learning tools for art and artists. What exactly does …
Dihybrid cross and the Law of Independent Assortment | High school biology | Khan Academy
In this video, we’re going to build on our understanding of Mendelian genetics and Punnett squares by starting to think about two different genes. So we’re going back to the pea plant, and we’re going to think about the gene for pea color and the gene for…
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Sermon | Genius: MLK/X | National Geographic
♫ Oh, teach me what to say. ♫ Good morning. Good morning. I had another sermon I intended to preach to you today. One that encompassed all that I have learned in my many, many years of education and preaching at my father’s hip. [Congregation] Yes. Yes. …
Deriving Lorentz transformation part 2 | Special relativity | Physics | Khan Academy
We left off in the last video trying to solve for gamma. We set up this equation, and then we had the inside that, well, look, we could pick a particular event that is connected by a light signal. In that case, X would be equal to CT, but also X Prime wou…
Regrouping to add 1-digit number | Addition and subtraction | 1st grade | Khan Academy
So, we have the number 35. The 3 is in the tens place, so it represents 30 or 3 tens—one 10, two groups of 10, three groups of 10. And then the 5 is in the ones place, so it represents five ones. We see them right over here—one, two, three, four, five. N…
Laura Ling on Imprisonment in North Korea | Inside North Korea
In March of 2009, I was working on a documentary about North Korean defectors, people who are fleeing the very desperate conditions in North Korea. During that time, we were filming along the Tumen River. This is the river that separates China and North K…