… In “Are wesmartenough to know how smartanimals are?” de Waal (2016) summarizes field … of examples of complex behavior in many animal species. His avowed aim is to challenge …
32 5 initially distinguished themselves from one another came to offer a particularly potent code for signifying grand social transitions. The various positions within the classical German …
… De Waal’s second answer to the question, are wesmartenough to know how smart animals are, concerns the fragility of the human ego. I think the most salient example concerns …
… De Waal questions "are wesmartenough to know how smartanimals are?" Before answering, any researcher must be wary to see the subject matter objectively, avoiding subjective …
… attribution, animals, morality, motivated memory The title of a best-selling scientific book “Are wesmartenough to know how smartanimals are?” (de Waal, 2016) indicates that wefind …
… We now have evidence that this process of social learning also applies to great apes, and I … and large, the animals that are intelligent are the ones that are cultural: they learn from one …
K Stallwood - Ethical and political approaches to nonhuman animal …, 2017 - Springer
In his chapter, Kim Stallwood claims that, notwithstanding formidable challenges to accomplishing its mission to free all species from the subjugation of one, the nonhuman animal rights …
… This deceptively readable popular scientific monograph Are WeSmartEnough to Know How SmartAnimals Are? affords digestible insights for the curious reader as well as …
… How did humans become cleverenough to live in nearly every major ecosystem on earth, … evolution, we consider what makes us distinctively smarter than other animals. Contrary to …