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Book Cover
Book
Author Griffin, Donald R. (Donald Redfield), 1915-2003.

Title Animal minds / Donald R. Griffin
Published Chicago : University of Chicago Press, [1992]
©1992

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  591.51 Gri/Ami  AVAILABLE
Description x, 310 pages ; 24 cm
Contents Animal mentality -- Finding food -- Predation -- Construction of artifacts -- Tools and special devices -- Concepts -- Physiological indices of thinking -- Communication as evidence of thinking -- Symbolic communication -- Deception and manipulation -- Apes and dolphins -- The significance of animal consciousness
Summary A piping plover feigns a broken wing to lure a predator away from her nest. A vervet monkey "cries wolf" and misleads his neighbors. A sea otter uses a stone to break open abalone shells. Communicating, using tools, making tactical gestures and strategic moves, animals often display what looks to us like conscious, even calculated behavior. In this riveting book, Donald Griffin, a pioneer in the study of animal behavior, investigates the mystery of the animal mind. He makes a persuasive argument (highly controversial in some scientific circles) that animals do think. Building on his groundbreaking work in The Question of Animal Awareness and Animal Thinking, Griffin brings together what we now know about animal cognition. He draws on the last decade's research in animal behavior, the philosophy of mind, and cognitive science to broaden our understanding of the nature and potential of animal minds. In species ranging from bees to dolphins to chimpanzees, Griffin shows us examples of foraging behavior, predatory tactics, artifact construction, tool use, and the experimental psychology of animal cognition. He gives us instances of animals communicating vocally and symbolically and reveals some of the surprising intricacies of their social arrangements. As in earlier works, Griffin explores the curious taboo among ethologists that has caused scientists for half a century to ignore the possibility that animals have conscious experience. The communicative signals of animals provide a revealing "window" on their thoughts and feelings, and scientific investigation may soon tell us what it is like, subjectively, to be an animal. Indeed, Griffin argues, animals may one day be able to communicate their thoughts directly and explicitly, once we are prepared to listen
Analysis Animals Mental processes
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-296) and index
Subject Animal behavior.
Animal psychology.
Cognition in animals.
Animal behavior.
Animal psychology.
Cognition in animals.
Behavior, Animal.
Animals -- Habits and behavior
Animals -- habits & behavior
Cognition.
LC no. 92006538
ISBN 0226308634 (cloth : alk. paper)