Talya wrote:
Bottlenose Dolphins and most larger species of cetaceans pass our "self-awareness" tests, and often test much higher than "higher primates" on human-intelligence tests (which, of course, are poor tests for self-awareness because they test things that humans concern themselves with, and may mean nothing to an different species, even if it is self aware.) Other creatures that score very high are magpies and elephants.
Dogs, Cats, and Parrots are fairly high on the animal-intelligence list, but do not pass self-awareness tests.
To be completely honest, I'm not sure a feral
human would necessarily pass those tests, either. It's such a rare occurrence that it's hard to get any statistically meaningful data. The meta-conversation here is that thought, emotion, and language are inextricably intertwined to the point that we often don't even realize it. In a very real sense, we
are language, and there is no way to "translate" this to/from a creature that doesn't possess that. Even statements like "the bear is angry" probably says more about us than it does about the bear.
That isn't to say that animals don't experience
anything like human emotion, RD. I believe that a deer, for instance, experiences a physiological fear reaction which is quite similar to our own. However, while a deer can experience fear, it cannot "fear for its life".
Lex Luthor wrote:
Lenas wrote:
Lex Luthor wrote:
Who the hell cares? They're stupid penguins. They'd forget about eachother's existence 10 minutes after being separated.
Way to be ignorant? Some penguins mate for life and have longer attention spans than you do.
Even if they mate for life I bet they would forget about eachother quickly after being separated.
Lex may or may not be speaking from ignorance, but what little evidence we have on the subject suggests that he's right either way. This is pretty much exactly what happened with the (in)famous Silo and Roy. Somehow, I'm not expecting "And Tango Makes Three" to be getting an epilogue about that any time soon.