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This comes as no surprise to anyone with an ounce of compassion but maybe

it'll convince some of the meatheads to STOP.

 

 

------

Rense.com

------

 

 

Man And Other Animals

Our Fellow Creatures Have Feelings - So

We Should Give Them Rights Too

By Jeremy Rifkin

The Guardian - UK

8-15-03

 

 

While much of the talk in big science this past year has centred on new

breakthroughs in biotechnology, nanotechnology, computers and more

esoteric questions such as the age of our universe, a quieter story has

been unfolding behind the scenes in laboratories around the world - one

whose impact on human perception and our understanding of the world is

likely to be even more profound. And, strangely, the companies sponsoring

the research are McDonald's, Burger King, KFC and other fast food

purveyors.

 

Pressured by animal rights activists and by growing public support for the

humane treatment of animals, these companies have financed research into,

among other things, the emotional, mental and behavioural states of our

fellow creatures. What the researchers are finding is unsettling. It

appears that many of our fellow creatures are more like us than we had

ever imagined. They feel pain, suffer, experience stress, affection,

excitement - and even love.

 

Studies on pigs' social behaviour at Purdue University in the US, for

example, have found that they crave affection and are easily depressed if

isolated or denied playtime with each other. The lack of mental and

physical stimuli can result in deterioration of health and increased

incidence of diseases. The EU has taken such studies to heart and has

outlawed the use of isolating pig stalls by 2012, and mandated their

replacement with open-air stalls. In Germany, the government is

encouraging pig farmers to give each pig 20 seconds of human contact every

day and to provide them with two or three toys to prevent them fighting.

 

The pig study only scratches the surface of what is going on in the field

of research into animal emotions and cognitive abilities. Researchers were

stunned recently by the publication of an article in the prestigious

journal Science reporting on the conceptual abilities of New Caledonian

crows. In controlled experiments, scientists at Oxford University reported

that two birds named Betty and Abel were given a choice between using two

tools, one a straight wire, the other a hooked wire, to snag a piece of

meat from inside a tube. Both chose the hooked wire. But then,

unexpectedly, Abel, the more dominant male, stole Betty's hook, leaving

her only with a straight wire. Unphased, Betty used her beak to wedge the

wire in a crack and then bent it with her beak to produce a hook, like the

one stolen from her. She then snagged the food from inside the tube.

Researchers repeated the experiment 10 more times giving her straight

wires, and she fashioned a hook out of the wire nine times, demonstrating

a sophisticated ability to create tools.

 

Then there is the story of Alex the African grey parrot, who was able to

master tasks previously thought to be the preserve of human beings. Alex

can identify more than 40 objects and seven colours, and can add and

separate objects into categories.

 

Equally impressive is Koko, a gorilla who was taught sign language, has

mastered more than 1,000 signs and understands several thousand English

words. On human IQ tests, she scores between 70 and 95, putting her in the

slow learner - but not retarded - category.

 

Tool-making and developing language skills are just two of the many

attributes we thought were exclusive to our species. Self-awareness is

another. Philosophers and animal behaviourists have long argued that other

animals are not capable of self-awareness because they lack a sense of

individualism. Not so, according to a spate of new studies. At the

Washington National Zoo, orangutans given mirrors explore parts of their

bodies they can't see otherwise, showing a sense of self. An orangutan

named Chantek at the Atlanta Zoo used a mirror to groom his teeth and

adjust his sunglasses, says his trainer.

 

When it comes to the ultimate test of what distinguishes humans from the

other creatures, scientists have long believed that mourning for the dead

represents the real divide. Other animals have no sense of their mortality

and are unable to comprehend the concept of their own death. But animals,

it appears, experience grief. Elephants will often stand next to their

dead kin for days, in silence, occasionally touching their bodies with

their trunks. Kenyan biologist Joyce Poole, who has studied African

elephants for 25 years, says that elephant behaviour towards their dead

" leaves me with little doubt that they experience deep emotion and have

some understanding of death. "

 

We also know that virtually all animals play, especially when young.

Anyone who has ever observed the antics of puppies, kittens or bear cubs

cannot help but notice the similarities in the way they play and our own

children. Recent studies in the brain chemistry of rats show that when

they play, their brains release large amounts of dopamine, a neurochemical

associated with pleasure and excitement in human beings.

 

Noting the striking similarities in brain anatomy and chemistry of humans

and other animals, Steven Siviy, a behavioural scientist at Gettysburg

College in Pennsylvania, asks a question increasingly on the minds of

other researchers: " If you believe in evolution by natural selection, how

can you believe that feelings suddenly appeared, out of the blue, with

human beings? "

 

The new findings of researchers are a far cry from the conceptions

espoused by orthodox science. Until very recently, scientists were still

advancing the idea that most creatures behaved by sheer instinct, and that

what appeared to be learned behaviour was merely genetically wired

activity. Now we know that geese have to teach their goslings their

migration routes. In fact, we are finding out that learning is passed on

from parent to offspring far more often than not and that most animals

engage in learned experience brought on by continued experimentation and

trial-and-error problem-solving.

 

So what does all of this portend for the way we treat our fellow creatures?

What about the thousands of animals subjected each year to painful

laboratory experiments? Or the millions of domestic animals raised under

inhumane conditions and destined for slaughter and human consumption.

Should we ban leg-hold traps and discourage the sale and purchase of fur

coats? And what about killing animals for sport? Fox hunting in England,

bull-fighting in Spain, cock-fighting in Mexico? What about entertainment?

Should lions be caged in zoos, should elephants be made to perform in

circuses?

 

These questions are beginning to be raised in courtrooms and in

legislation around the world. Today, Harvard and 25 other law schools in

the US have introduced law courses on animal rights, and an increasing

number of cases representing the rights of animals are entering the court

system. Germany recently became the first government in the world to

guarantee animal rights in its constitution.

 

The human journey is, at its core, about the extension of empathy to

broader and more inclusive domains. At first, the empathy extended only to

kin and tribe. Eventually it was extended to people of like-minded values

- a common religion, nationality or ideology. In the 19th century, the

first humane societies were established, extending the empathy to include

our fellow creatures. Today, millions of people, under the banner of the

animal rights movement, are continuing to deepen and to expand human

concern for, and empathy toward, our fellow creatures.

 

The current studies into animals' emotions, cognition and behaviour open

up a new phase in the human journey, allowing us to both expand and deepen

our empathy - this time, to include the broader community of creatures who

live alongside us.

 

- Jeremy Rifkin is the author of Beyond Beef: The Rise and Fall of the

Cattle Culture (Plume, 1992), and The Biotech Century (Victor Gollancz,

1998). He is also the president of the Foundation on Economic Trends in

Washington DC

 

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/animalrights/story/0,11917,1020066,00.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

Disclaimer

 

Email This Article

 

 

 

 

MainPage

http://www.rense.com

 

 

This Site Served by TheHostPros

 

 

 

If you have all the answers, my questions cannot reach you.

--Bu Xan Da, Tenshin Monastery, Sh'an Dojo

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Dear Stewarts,

 

Thanks for sharing this article with us. As you said 'this comes as no

surprise to anyone with an ounce of compassion but maybe it'll convince some of

the meatheads to STOP.' Yes, we can only keep on getting the word out

there....so, again, thanks for sending to the group.

 

Yours,

 

Carol

-

The Stewarts

Sunday, August 17, 2003 10:57 AM

Animals Like Us

 

 

This comes as no surprise to anyone with an ounce of compassion but maybe

it'll convince some of the meatheads to STOP.

 

 

------

Rense.com

------

 

 

Man And Other Animals

Our Fellow Creatures Have Feelings - So

We Should Give Them Rights Too

By Jeremy Rifkin

The Guardian - UK

8-15-03

 

 

While much of the talk in big science this past year has centred on new

breakthroughs in biotechnology, nanotechnology, computers and more

esoteric questions such as the age of our universe, a quieter story has

been unfolding behind the scenes in laboratories around the world - one

whose impact on human perception and our understanding of the world is

likely to be even more profound. And, strangely, the companies sponsoring

the research are McDonald's, Burger King, KFC and other fast food

purveyors.

 

Pressured by animal rights activists and by growing public support for the

humane treatment of animals, these companies have financed research into,

among other things, the emotional, mental and behavioural states of our

fellow creatures. What the researchers are finding is unsettling. It

appears that many of our fellow creatures are more like us than we had

ever imagined. They feel pain, suffer, experience stress, affection,

excitement - and even love.

 

Studies on pigs' social behaviour at Purdue University in the US, for

example, have found that they crave affection and are easily depressed if

isolated or denied playtime with each other. The lack of mental and

physical stimuli can result in deterioration of health and increased

incidence of diseases. The EU has taken such studies to heart and has

outlawed the use of isolating pig stalls by 2012, and mandated their

replacement with open-air stalls. In Germany, the government is

encouraging pig farmers to give each pig 20 seconds of human contact every

day and to provide them with two or three toys to prevent them fighting.

 

The pig study only scratches the surface of what is going on in the field

of research into animal emotions and cognitive abilities. Researchers were

stunned recently by the publication of an article in the prestigious

journal Science reporting on the conceptual abilities of New Caledonian

crows. In controlled experiments, scientists at Oxford University reported

that two birds named Betty and Abel were given a choice between using two

tools, one a straight wire, the other a hooked wire, to snag a piece of

meat from inside a tube. Both chose the hooked wire. But then,

unexpectedly, Abel, the more dominant male, stole Betty's hook, leaving

her only with a straight wire. Unphased, Betty used her beak to wedge the

wire in a crack and then bent it with her beak to produce a hook, like the

one stolen from her. She then snagged the food from inside the tube.

Researchers repeated the experiment 10 more times giving her straight

wires, and she fashioned a hook out of the wire nine times, demonstrating

a sophisticated ability to create tools.

 

Then there is the story of Alex the African grey parrot, who was able to

master tasks previously thought to be the preserve of human beings. Alex

can identify more than 40 objects and seven colours, and can add and

separate objects into categories.

 

Equally impressive is Koko, a gorilla who was taught sign language, has

mastered more than 1,000 signs and understands several thousand English

words. On human IQ tests, she scores between 70 and 95, putting her in the

slow learner - but not retarded - category.

 

Tool-making and developing language skills are just two of the many

attributes we thought were exclusive to our species. Self-awareness is

another. Philosophers and animal behaviourists have long argued that other

animals are not capable of self-awareness because they lack a sense of

individualism. Not so, according to a spate of new studies. At the

Washington National Zoo, orangutans given mirrors explore parts of their

bodies they can't see otherwise, showing a sense of self. An orangutan

named Chantek at the Atlanta Zoo used a mirror to groom his teeth and

adjust his sunglasses, says his trainer.

 

When it comes to the ultimate test of what distinguishes humans from the

other creatures, scientists have long believed that mourning for the dead

represents the real divide. Other animals have no sense of their mortality

and are unable to comprehend the concept of their own death. But animals,

it appears, experience grief. Elephants will often stand next to their

dead kin for days, in silence, occasionally touching their bodies with

their trunks. Kenyan biologist Joyce Poole, who has studied African

elephants for 25 years, says that elephant behaviour towards their dead

" leaves me with little doubt that they experience deep emotion and have

some understanding of death. "

 

We also know that virtually all animals play, especially when young.

Anyone who has ever observed the antics of puppies, kittens or bear cubs

cannot help but notice the similarities in the way they play and our own

children. Recent studies in the brain chemistry of rats show that when

they play, their brains release large amounts of dopamine, a neurochemical

associated with pleasure and excitement in human beings.

 

Noting the striking similarities in brain anatomy and chemistry of humans

and other animals, Steven Siviy, a behavioural scientist at Gettysburg

College in Pennsylvania, asks a question increasingly on the minds of

other researchers: " If you believe in evolution by natural selection, how

can you believe that feelings suddenly appeared, out of the blue, with

human beings? "

 

The new findings of researchers are a far cry from the conceptions

espoused by orthodox science. Until very recently, scientists were still

advancing the idea that most creatures behaved by sheer instinct, and that

what appeared to be learned behaviour was merely genetically wired

activity. Now we know that geese have to teach their goslings their

migration routes. In fact, we are finding out that learning is passed on

from parent to offspring far more often than not and that most animals

engage in learned experience brought on by continued experimentation and

trial-and-error problem-solving.

 

So what does all of this portend for the way we treat our fellow creatures?

What about the thousands of animals subjected each year to painful

laboratory experiments? Or the millions of domestic animals raised under

inhumane conditions and destined for slaughter and human consumption.

Should we ban leg-hold traps and discourage the sale and purchase of fur

coats? And what about killing animals for sport? Fox hunting in England,

bull-fighting in Spain, cock-fighting in Mexico? What about entertainment?

Should lions be caged in zoos, should elephants be made to perform in

circuses?

 

These questions are beginning to be raised in courtrooms and in

legislation around the world. Today, Harvard and 25 other law schools in

the US have introduced law courses on animal rights, and an increasing

number of cases representing the rights of animals are entering the court

system. Germany recently became the first government in the world to

guarantee animal rights in its constitution.

 

The human journey is, at its core, about the extension of empathy to

broader and more inclusive domains. At first, the empathy extended only to

kin and tribe. Eventually it was extended to people of like-minded values

- a common religion, nationality or ideology. In the 19th century, the

first humane societies were established, extending the empathy to include

our fellow creatures. Today, millions of people, under the banner of the

animal rights movement, are continuing to deepen and to expand human

concern for, and empathy toward, our fellow creatures.

 

The current studies into animals' emotions, cognition and behaviour open

up a new phase in the human journey, allowing us to both expand and deepen

our empathy - this time, to include the broader community of creatures who

live alongside us.

 

- Jeremy Rifkin is the author of Beyond Beef: The Rise and Fall of the

Cattle Culture (Plume, 1992), and The Biotech Century (Victor Gollancz,

1998). He is also the president of the Foundation on Economic Trends in

Washington DC

 

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/animalrights/story/0,11917,1020066,00.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

Disclaimer

 

Email This Article

 

 

 

 

MainPage

http://www.rense.com

 

 

This Site Served by TheHostPros

 

 

 

If you have all the answers, my questions cannot reach you.

--Bu Xan Da, Tenshin Monastery, Sh'an Dojo

 

 

 

 

 

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