Forecasts from March 1 Issue:
Nonfiction
-- 3/1/2004
DO ANIMALS THINK?
Clive D.L. Wynne. Princeton Univ., $26.95 (288p) ISBN 0-691-11311-4
Animal expert Wynne (Animal Cognition: The Mental Life of
Animals), an associate professor of psychology at the University of
Florida, delivers a detailed yet enjoyably written exploration of recent
discoveries of modern animal behavior. In answering the question whether
animals “think” or have the consciousness of self that humans do, his main
point is simple: “We don’t have to pretend that some species have consciousness
equivalent to ours. They don’t and they don’t need it to matter to us and
deserve our attention.” Wynne is clearly arguing against the view of animal
rights advocates such as Peter Singer and Jane Goodall who ascribe human
attributes to animals. But Wynne is no reactionary—he strongly sympathizes with
those who wish to improve the treatment of animals. But he forcefully argues
that what animals may “know”—for example, the honeybee recognizes time of
day—is “coded in the connections of the neurons; they are not conscious ideas.”
However, in contending that “the psychological abilities that make human
culture possible... are almost entirely lacking in any other species,” he
delightfully presents the many remarkable abilities of such animals as the bat,
which “sees” using echolocation, “one of the most astonishing discoveries made
about any animal’s world in the last fifty years”; and dolphins, who use a form
of sonar. It helps his arguments that Wynne is often as entertaining as he is
erudite (“Like journalists listening in for excitement on police radio
frequencies, dolphins channel-surf through the sound frequencies fish use”). (Apr.)