Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?
by Frans de Waal
W.W. Norton and Company
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
From world-renowned biologist and
primatologist Frans de Waal, a
groundbreaking work on animal
intelligence destined to become a classic.
What separates your mind from an animal’s? Maybe you think
it’s your ability to design tools, your sense of self, or your grasp of
past and future—all traits that have helped us define ourselves as the
planet’s preeminent species. But in recent decades, these claims have
eroded, or even been disproven outright, by a revolution in the study of
animal cognition. Take the way octopuses use coconut shells as tools;
elephants that classify humans by age, gender, and language; or Ayumu,
the young male chimpanzee at Kyoto University whose flash memory puts
that of humans to shame. Based on research involving crows, dolphins,
parrots, sheep, wasps, bats, whales, and of course chimpanzees and
bonobos, Frans de Waal explores both the scope and the depth of animal
intelligence. He offers a firsthand account of how science has stood
traditional behaviorism on its head by revealing how smart animals
really are, and how we’ve underestimated their abilities for too long.
People
often assume a cognitive ladder, from lower to higher forms, with our
own intelligence at the top. But what if it is more like a bush, with
cognition taking different forms that are often incomparable to ours?
Would you presume yourself dumber than a squirrel because you’re less
adept at recalling the locations of hundreds of buried acorns? Or would
you judge your perception of your surroundings as more sophisticated
than that of a echolocating bat? De Waal reviews the rise and fall of
the mechanistic view of animals and opens our minds to the idea
that animal minds are far more intricate and complex than we have
assumed. De Waal’s landmark work will convince you to rethink everything
you thought you knew about animal—and human—intelligence.
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