قراءة كتاب Animal Intelligence The International Scientific Series, Vol. XLIV.
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Animal Intelligence The International Scientific Series, Vol. XLIV.
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CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI. Spiders and Scorpions 204
CHAPTER VII. Remaining Articulata 226
CHAPTER VIII. Fish 241
CHAPTER IX. Batrachians and Reptiles 254
CHAPTER X. Birds 266
CHAPTER XI. Mammals 326
CHAPTER XII. Rodents 353
CHAPTER XIII. Elephant 386
CHAPTER XIV. The Cat 411
CHAPTER XV. Foxes, Wolves, Jackals, &c. 426
CHAPTER XVI. The Dog 437
CHAPTER XVII. Monkeys, Apes, and Baboons 471 Index 499
INTRODUCTION.
Now, in this mode of procedure what is the kind of activities which may be regarded as indicative of mind? I certainly do not so regard the flowing of a river or the blowing of the wind. Why? First, because the objects are too remote in kind from my own organism to admit of my drawing any reasonable analogy between them and it; and, secondly, because the activities which they present are of invariably the same kind under the same circumstances; they afford no evidence of feeling or purpose. In other words, two conditions require to be satisfied before we even begin to imagine that observable activities are indicative of mind: first, the activities must be displayed by a living organism; and secondly, they must be of a kind to suggest the presence of two elements which we recognise as the distinctive characteristics of mind as such—consciousness and choice.
So far, then, the case seems simple enough. Wherever we see a living organism apparently exerting intentional choice, we might infer that it is conscious choice, and therefore that the organism has a mind. But further reflection shows us that this is just what we cannot do; for although it is true that there is no mind without the power of conscious choice, it is not true that all apparent choice is due to mind. In our own organisms, for instance, we find a great many adaptive movements performed without choice or even consciousness coming into play at all—such, for instance, as in the beating of our hearts. And not only so, but physiological experiments and pathological lesions prove that in our own and in other organisms the