Mindreading Animals

Mindreading Animals The Debate Over What Animals Know About Other Minds - A Bradford Book

Paperback (11 Sep 2015)

Not available for sale

Includes delivery to the United States

Out of stock

This service is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Publisher's Synopsis

A comprehensive examination of a hotly debated question proposes a new model for mindreading in animals and a new experimental approach.

Animals live in a world of other minds, human and nonhuman, and their well-being and survival often depends on what is going on in the minds of these other creatures. But do animals know that other creatures have minds? And how would we know if they do? In Mindreading Animals, Robert Lurz offers a fresh approach to the hotly debated question of mental-state attribution in nonhuman animals. Some empirical researchers and philosophers claim that some animals are capable of anticipating other creatures' behaviors by interpreting observable cues as signs of underlying mental states; others claim that animals are merely clever behavior-readers, capable of using such cues to anticipate others' behaviors without interpreting them as evidence of underlying mental states. Lurz argues that neither position is compelling and proposes a way to move the debate, and the field, forward.

Lurz offers a bottom-up model of mental-state attribution that is built on cognitive abilities that animals are known to possess rather than on a preconceived view of the mind applicable to mindreading abilities in humans. Lurz goes on to describe an innovative series of new experimental protocols for animal mindreading research that show in detail how various types of animals-from apes to monkeys to ravens to dogs-can be tested for perceptual state and belief attribution.

Book information

ISBN: 9780262528238
Publisher: The MIT Press
Imprint: The MIT Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 591.513
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Weight: 338g
Height: 222mm
Width: 147mm
Spine width: 16mm