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" BEKOFF MARC " <Marc.Bekoff

<undisclosed-recipients:>

Friday, November 14, 2003 8:58 PM

Donald Griffin dies

 

 

>

> Donald R. Griffin, 88, Who Argued Animals Can Think, Dies

>

> By CAROL KAESUK YOON

>

> Published: November 14, 2003

>

>

> Ed Quinn for The New York Times

> Dr. Donald R. Griffin in 2001.

>

> Dr. Donald R. Griffin, who was considered the founder of the modern field

involving the study of animal thinking and consciousness, and who early in

his career helped unravel the secret of bats' navigation system, died last

Friday in Lexington, Mass. He was 88.

>

> An emeritus professor of animal behavior at Rockefeller University, Dr.

Griffin gave birth to the field known as cognitive ethology in 1978 when he

broke a scientific taboo by suggesting that animals might have the capacity

to think and reason, and that scientists should study these mental

processes.

>

> " He started a revolution in the way we see animals, " said Dr. Marian Stamp

Dawkins, an animal behaviorist at Oxford University. " People had been saying

we shouldn't study animal minds or animal consciousness but only things we

can observe. He said this is a legitimate question. He really opened the

door. "

>

> In his publications, Dr. Griffin argued that the great complexity and

adaptability of animal behavior, from the sophisticated food-gathering

behavior of chimps to the clever fishing techniques of herons, suggest that

animals are not mere automatons. Instead, he maintained, they are thinking

beings, even if they might be thinking about different things, in ways

entirely different from humans.

>

> In fact, other scientists in earlier centuries had considered the internal

lives of animals (including Darwin, who wrote " The Expression of the

Emotions in Man and Animals " ), and many nonscientists have long been

comfortable with the assertion that animals have thoughts, plans and

feelings. Yet among scientists, especially those studying animal behavior,

animal thinking was considered a subject that belonged far outside the realm

of scientific exploration.

>

> Many scientists say the only reason that animal thinking was given

consideration at all was that Dr. Griffin suggested it. Respected as a

rigorous scientist, he was known to biologists for discovering the method

bats use to navigate in darkness.

>

> As a student, Donald Griffin and a fellow student, Robert Galambos, found

that bats could use reflected sounds to detect objects. In 1944, Dr. Griffin

coined the term echolocation to describe the phenomenon.

>

> To many, the idea was outrageous.

>

> Dr. Griffin once wrote, " One distinguished physiologist was so shocked by

our presentation at a scientific meeting that he seized Bob by the shoulders

and shook him while expostulating, `You can't really mean that!' "

>

> But while echolocation is well accepted today, Dr. Griffin's pleas that

animal thinking and consciousness become standard fare for research have met

with more mixed success.

>

> The numerous and vocal critics of the growing field of cognitive ethology

include both scientists and philosophers. Scientists complain the field is

too dependent on anecdote, highly subjective and anthropomorphic, more akin

to the way a dog owner envisions his pet's day than the way a scientist

typically approaches the study of animal behavior.

>

> In addition, the field's natural connection to movements like animal

rights advocacy has made some scientists wary.

>

> Yet for other scientists, animal reasoning and consciousness have merely

become the latest in the long list of humanity's supposedly unique

characteristics to be acknowledged as shared more widely across the animal

kingdom. These researchers acknowledge the difficulty of studying an

animal's mental state, but say such hurdles should not preclude animal

thinking from being the subject of scientific research.

>

> Today cognitive ethologists study many varied questions about how animals

might think: if animals can form concepts, for example, or anticipate the

actions of others.

>

> " It's a curious point that I've made in all my books, " Dr. Griffin once

said, " that in the face of very weak evidence we scientists tend to make

very strong, negative statements: no animal does this, animals can't do that

and so on, when we really don't know. I think we should have an open mind. "

>

> Dr. Griffin was born in Southampton, N.Y., in 1915. He received his

bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from Harvard. He was a professor

at Cornell, then later at Harvard, where he was a professor of zoology. He

finished his career at Rockefeller. He was also a member of the National

Academy of Sciences.

>

> After retiring from Rockefeller in 1986, he moved to Lexington, Mass.

>

> He is survived by two daughters, Janet Abbott of Arlington, Mass., and

Margaret Griffin of Montreal, and a son, John, of Brighton, Mass.

>

>

> New York Times

>

> ....

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