Animals in translation

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Blaidd Drwg
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Animals in translation

Post by Blaidd Drwg »

Great book, short (308 pages) well referenced and still highly anecdotal. Author is Temple Grandin, PHD and an autistic slaughterhouse designer and animal behaviourist etc...draws fascinating parallels about how the autistic brain works with how we believe animals may think. Language, emotion, how animals experience pain and fear.truly great and surprising stuff. Some of it seems off the cuff and wholly anecdotal but i chased down many of the references and the sceince is solid. The emerging science of wolf and man's co-evolution is amazing.
"He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." JS Mill

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Damien
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Re: Animals in translation

Post by Damien »

Temple Grandin is a fascinating person.
Very influential in designing "ethical slaughterhouses" and surprisingly open about being studied by neuroscientists.
Sounds like an interesting read.
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Now look. I've eaten a pice of pie.
When we spin the pie again, the area cut out of the volume of the sphere equals fitness.


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Blaidd Drwg
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Re: Animals in translation

Post by Blaidd Drwg »

Animals in Translation ...

redefines consciousness and argues that language is not a requirement for consciousness

categorizes autism as a way station on the road from animals to humans

explores the "Interpreter" in the normal human brain that filters out detail, creating an unintentional blindness that animals and autistics do not suffer from

applies the autism theory of "hyper-specificity' to animals, meaning that there is no forest, only trees, trees, and more trees

argues that the single worst thing you can do to an animal is make it feel afraid

examines how humans and animals use their emotions, including to predict the future

compares animals to autistic savants, in fact declaring that animals may be autistic savants, with special forms of genius that normal people cannot see

explains that most animals have "super-human" skills: animals have animal genius

reveals the abilities handicapped people, and animals, have that normal people don't
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6rM20E87OM[/youtube]
"He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." JS Mill

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buckethead
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Re: Animals in translation

Post by buckethead »

And wolves don't eat grains... Coincidence?

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