Post Number:#31
March 15th, 2012, 1:13 pm
Although I am still waiting for a response to the link I posted in my previous posts, I have even more evidence that some animals imagine:
The above article is interesting because it does not even mention the smartest animals such as the very playful dolphins, who presumably are even more imaginative.
Jason G. Goldman (graduate student in developmental psychology at the University of Southern California, studying the evolutionary and developmental origins of the mind in humans and non-human animals) wrote:Taken together, it seems as if some animals, under some circumstances, do indeed engage in pretend play. They treat some objects as if they were different objects (as with Washoe and her brush), they act is if objects are present where they are not (as with Kanzi and his food), or they use behaviors relevant to one activity (fighting or mating, in dogs) and repurpose them for play. However, animals might not possess the meta-awareness that they are pretending. They might not understand the very concepts of “pretend” or “imagination,” the way we as humans do.
Still, some animals seem able to imagine, even if in a limited way. And that’s pretty cool.
Jensvold, M., & Fouts, R. (1993). Imaginary Play in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) Human Evolution, 8 (3), 217-227 DOI: 10.1007/BF02436716
Suddendorf T, & Whiten A (2001). Mental evolution and development: evidence for secondary representation in children, great ages, and other animals. Psychological bulletin, 127 (5), 629-50 PMID: 11548971
Lillard AS (1993). Pretend play skills and the child’s theory of mind. Child development, 64 (2), 348-71 PMID: 8477622
Flavell, J., Flavell, E., Green, F. L., & Korfmacher, J. E. (1990). Do young children think of television images as pictures or real objects?. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 34(4), 399-419.
Bekoff, Marc (1997) Playing with Play: What Can We Learn About Cognition, Negotiation, and Evolution? D. Cummins and C. Allen (eds.) The Evolution of Mind. New York. Oxford University Press
DeLoache, J., Pierroutsakos, S., Uttal, D., Rosengren, K., & Gottlieb, A. (1998). Grasping the Nature of Pictures Psychological Science, 9 (3), 205-210 DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.00039
[full article]
The above article is interesting because it does not even mention the smartest animals such as the very playful dolphins, who presumably are even more imaginative.
Tomas Persson, Lund University wrote:[Wolfgang Köhler] observed that it seemed necessary for the toy animals to have some likeness to real animals, "nearness to life," in order to invoke fear. The stuffed animals invoked even stronger responses than did most real animals. He concluded that the stuffed animals, not being fully real, played on the imagination [of chimpanzees] in a way that real animals did not.
Interpreting, or "filling in" what is not there, is one definition of imagination.
[...]
There is evidence that some [individual chimpanzees] do interpret pictures, even abstract ones like cartoons. This not only proves that animals can have some form of imagination. By studying these individuals' histories and compare them with individuals that are less able, we can also learn more about pictorial competence as such.
[full article]
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Check it out: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often thought?