Far more animals than previously thought likely have consciousness, top scientists say in a new declaration — including fish, lobsters and octopus.

Bees play by rolling wooden balls — apparently for fun. The cleaner wrasse fish appears to recognize its own visage in an underwater mirror. Octopuses seem to react to anesthetic drugs and will avoid settings where they likely experienced past pain.

All three of these discoveries came in the last five years — indications that the more scientists test animals, the more they find that many species may have inner lives and be sentient. A surprising range of creatures have shown evidence of conscious thought or experience, including insects, fish and some crustaceans.

That has prompted a group of top researchers on animal cognition to publish a new pronouncement that they hope will transform how scientists and society view — and care — for animals.

Nearly 40 researchers signed “The New York Declaration on Animal Consciousness,” which was first presented at a conference at New York University on Friday morning. It marks a pivotal moment, as a flood of research on animal cognition collides with debates over how various species ought to be treated.

  • SaltySalamander
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    9828 days ago

    Considering that as sentient beings ourselves, we don’t really even understand sentience, it’s kinda bold to assume we’ve got a monopoly on it.

    • @Wogi@lemmy.world
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      2628 days ago

      Similarly I wonder how much of the observation is projection. We don’t know what the bee thinks it’s getting out of rolling the ball around, we don’t know that the fish was actually reacting to seeing itself. At some level we’re assuming that’s what’s going on because it makes sense to us.

      • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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        1428 days ago

        We are limited by our own understanding and imagination, but I don’t know any other explanation for silly little nonproductive activities other than “play”. Is it because it is play, or is it beyond our understanding? We can’t communicate with them, but we can draw parallels between their behaviors and our own natural behaviors.

      • @Meuzzin@lemmy.world
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        327 days ago

        Humans have a really, really hard time NOT assigning human attributes to every other living thing.

        One thing that makes this hypothesis seem possible, is that some researchers are suggesting consciousness is external, and eternal. Meaning all living things are essentially antennae.

    • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      127 days ago

      With a couple of perfect millennia of perfect human development and advances in all fields, we probably wouldn’t think of these versions of ourselves as more or less sentient than other thing populating Earth.

      Sure, they paint caves & make 10s videos, but that’s just natural automation, a response to environment, simply not knowing better.

  • Wolfeh
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    5727 days ago

    What was obvious to most of us as kids (and what was attempted to be beaten out of us as kids) is now being accepted by scientists. Love it.

      • @Natanael@slrpnk.net
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        1627 days ago

        It’s not really that they all thought they didn’t, it’s that there was a lack of evidence to declare it to likely be true. Better testing methodology to exclude other possible explanations have contributed.

  • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    5728 days ago

    I dunno about all that, but I used to have an African fish that would always get the zoomies when I’d come home from work. He’d spit water at me or gravel at the glass to get my attention, and loved playing hide and seek and always brushed up on my hands when I was working on his tank. He never reacted this way to visitors, just me.

    • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      27 days ago

      Exactly this.

      And to get to this you need experience, research, and knowledge.

      And trying to explain this to humans in general would take several generations in best case scenario (much less actually doing/changing anything with that knowledge).

      Usually anything attacking the doctrine of how extra super special & way more unique than other equally unique species are is meet with severe (auto-?)hostility.

      Even without our status in question, just the “threat” of something being slightly less/differently inferior to us is immediately attacked by the vast majority.

      And once we decide something is inferior to us it takes extra effort to change the popular belief (like racism between humans as well - just designate some human as non-human & they are considered about as much as billions of yeast bacteria as we are baking bread).

      • @Daft_ish@lemmy.world
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        27 days ago

        I think the auto-hostility is just hubris. Some people would like to pretend they know everything about everything. So when learning new things they get hostile because, oh no, we found them out.

  • Skua
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    3828 days ago

    It seems odd to me that this article is framing octopodes as a surprising inclusion. Aren’t they generally known to be some of the most intelligent animals of all?

    • @LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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      1728 days ago

      Yes and no. It has long been known that they are surprisingly intelligent, but the structure of their nervous system is very strange and decentralized which makes it fairly surprising nonetheless.

        • We have fossil evidence otherwise. Their greatest barrier to developing higher intelligence is that they die after reproduction, so they’ll never have pressures to develop more symbolic thought or pass on knowledge.

          • @roguetrick@lemmy.world
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            27 days ago

            Octopuses are mostly antisocial anyway and wouldn’t want that. Squid, by comparison, use they high intelligence for social interaction but most of it is trying to navigate a social setting where you want to eat as much as you can, mate with your neighbors, and avoid offending your neighbors enough that they eat you. There’s still only so much you can do when you die after a year or two because of a biological time bomb that kills you with sex hormone overload.

    • FuglyDuck
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      5228 days ago

      We don’t even know what sentience/sapience/whatever is. We have some thoughts, people argue about the definitions, and stuff; but really… it all comes down to… “are they like us”… but we don’t even really know what that means.

      So no. It’s not obvious. (Particularly because humans are surprisingly stupid.)

      • @frankgrimeszz@lemmy.world
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        828 days ago

        To people who spend a lot of time around animals or even sea creatures, it may be obvious that they’re more like us than most would assume.

      • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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        326 days ago

        To put it another way, humans just aren’t that special. We started from the assumption that we are somehow fundamentally different

        We keep finding out that all sorts of animals have language and culture, and it blows my mind that apparently, just about everything seems to have something akin to a name

    • speck
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      1028 days ago

      Denying such things in other animals has been part of a long-standing, mainly Western, push for human exceptionalism

    • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      -328 days ago

      I mean people have been pushing for recognition of this for at least a few thousand years so I’d say yes.

      The lengths people are willing to go in self delusion for a burger are astounding though.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        528 days ago

        Some people are just straight up fine eating beef because they don’t care. Like, we won the food chain, and that’s enough for them

        • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          -828 days ago

          You really said “we won the food chain” like you wouldn’t run screaming from a slightly pissed off badger haha.

          What a fucking absurd stance, the school of “if I can do it: it must be fine to do” ethics.

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            28 days ago

            I didn’t say it’s my opinion, you silly goose.

            The lack of critical thinking here is insane

            Edit: the whole way we won the food chain isnt about standing toe to toe with any animal, we productionized their whole existence.

            Beyond that I don’t know how you could know what animals I am or am not afraid of, that’s a pretty silly assumption

            • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              28 days ago

              Uh huh, I believe you. You’re so tough and smart and strong, bravely debating and owning the libs, casually fighting badgers armed with nothing but your Jordan Peterson body pillow.

              To think that Aldous Huxley was known as the last Renaissance man when you were among us all along.

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                28 days ago

                Ok not sure what I’m debating here, is it really a point of argument that some folks are fine with consuming meat? Is it really a point of argument that humans are at the top of the global food chain?

                Edit are you just 3 badgers in a trench coat?

          • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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            28 days ago

            the school of “if I can do it: it must be fine to do” ethics

            Some people would call this the “law of the jungle”, or the natural state of things.

            It’s also not reasonable to assume any one person would run screaming from a badger. People wrestle crocodiles and mountain lions and win.

            • @naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              -228 days ago

              If anyone thinks that I hope they get hunted by a sadist, are kept as their plaything, and live a long life begging for death.

              It’s a completely asinine opinion that absolutely nobody worth giving a modicum of time or respect to maintains. There’s not even any point talking about, it’s like chiming in with the fact that some people think smearing shit on toilet walls is the correct thing to do when discussing how to grow food.

              Also anyone who gets defensive about the idea they would run screaming from a moderately pissed off badger has never interacted with a badger and would absolutely run screaming from one.

    • @jaemo@sh.itjust.works
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      1727 days ago

      It’s self evident to anyone not plagued by speciesism, regardless of their feelings about animals; I don’t think we ought to allow that much latitude to opt-out of the obvious moral consequences of this truth.

  • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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    2727 days ago

    Ofc they are sentient.

    I fail to understand why do we will push the ‘no expression of the face means no intelligence or emotions bcs most of us communicate that way’.

    It always turns out that whatever brain mechanics we think of as our own we later & with minimal research find in other animals as well.

    Evolutionary speaking too, same brain centres (with various density and relative size - of which we dont have all that dense brains & and most parts are underdeveloped), it’s absolutely unlikely we would have developed something new in a few millions of years (especially given smol & fragmented populations facing extinctions and smol gene pools - tho that could be interpreted the other way too). It’s just specialisation, some (advantageous) functions grew, other were optimised to the point of non-existence.

    Then again, given how intolerant are we to our own species in terms of our emotional response to slight visual differences (I mean vcompletely evolutionary, uncanny valley thing, the next village of humanoids might have been competing for the same resources, which makes different culture/colours/face shapes = danger, etc), how we choose to ignore compassion (like ‘look at that idiot, ofc they have no feelings, not unlike me, the superior being’) … ofc we can’t immediately recognise and understand what and how animals are feeling. It takes a lot of time, effort, & empathy (mechanical empathy, like to fully underhand their environment from their pov, and emotional empathy, how they are processing that environment).

    And the bigger the difference and habitats, the harder it is (like any sea animal really). Anything non-mammal seems alien to us, no matter the smarts (eg cuttlefish, that can clearly experience psychological trauma on individual and population/cultural level).

    And then there are fungi. After that plants. And whatever we choose bacteria to be (like beings, or just a literal matter of environment we live within). Etc :).

    • @gap_betweenus@lemmy.world
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      2127 days ago

      Insects don’t really have brains. The complexity of their ganglia is not really comparable to what we consider a brain and seems rather unlikely that they have anything like our consciousness, just due to the difference in complexity. Does not mean we should treat them like shit, they are living creatures - but also not sure why we need to pretend they are something they are clearly not.

      • @HauntedCupcake@lemmy.world
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        627 days ago

        Jumping spiders show some level of consciousness. They’re intelligent predators that heavily use their sight to identify prey. They can recognise different prey types, learn their behaviours and adjust hunting strategies accordingly. A good example is how they are able to recognise when certain prey is acting odd, deduce it’s injured and drop their stealthy approach for a more direct one. They’re also capable of remembering their environment and using indirect and often complex paths to sneak up on prey.

        Scientists have even observed them “dreaming”, which is likely when they do the information processing required for such comparatively complex behaviours https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/jumping-spiders-dream-rem-sleep-study-suggests

        • @gap_betweenus@lemmy.world
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          527 days ago

          Bold claim to go from REM in sleep-like state to dreams and consciousness, and the original paper is not making that claim.

          A good example is how they are able to recognise when certain prey is acting odd, deduce it’s injured and drop their stealthy approach for a more direct one. They’re also capable of remembering their environment and using indirect and often complex paths to sneak up on prey.

          All of this seems rather possible even with basic learning mechanisms on molecular level. Not sure why you would claim that this need consciousness. But if you have a paper on this topic I would be more than interested to read them.

          • @HauntedCupcake@lemmy.world
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            27 days ago

            No papers that are actually concrete. Most of it is just speculation.

            I’m not a scientist, and for me personally it’s enough to make me spend a bit longer thinking before immediately dismissing all insects as mindless automatons. Most probably are simple biological machines. Jumping spiders are however massive outliers in terms of insect intelligence, and a cursory Google search will provide a wealth of evidence for it.

            I personally would also go as far as believing that they dream. I just don’t believe there’s a reasonable explanation for the REM like state other than some form of dreaming, even if rudimentary.

            I’m not going to state that jumping spiders are fully conscious as 100% fact, there’s not enough proof for that. But they do have a proven ability to learn, and an ability to make somewhat complex plans. And all I’m trying to say is that we need more research before dismissing them so certainly.

            • @gap_betweenus@lemmy.world
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              527 days ago

              Not a scientist my self, but I studies biology and neuroscience more specifically - just left the field. I will look more into jumping spiders, since it’s sounds interesting and I was not really aware that they are that different from other spiders. Now I’m more curious and I definitely agree that we need more research in general.

      • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        27 days ago

        Yes, I agree, in just pointing out how difficult is to understand that. Theoretically, it’s not like a human-level intelligent insect couldn’t exist.

        My thinking to challenge myself/ourselves: Then how do whole colonies decide and plan resources? When to gave truce or war with the neighbouring colonies (of same or completely different species?). Their war strategies resemble human wars without technology/weapons. They also cultivate insects, plants, and fungi. Some within colonies plan, deceive, and try to develop a new queen (instead of the queen doing it in purpose/strategy).

        Having brains as such imho is part of the problem as it adds a lot of complexity for humans to relate to.

        But even our brains don’t work and govern alone, major organs have a complex nervous systems of their own (complex in the sense of not having a centre).

        Not as a direct comparison to insect, but eg cephalopod brains are also vastly different, yet clearly highly intelligent.

        • @gap_betweenus@lemmy.world
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          427 days ago

          My thinking to challenge myself/ourselves: Then how do whole colonies decide and plan resources? When to gave truce or war with the neighbouring colonies (of same or completely different species?). Their war strategies resemble human wars without technology/weapons. They also cultivate insects, plants, and fungi. Some within colonies plan, deceive, and try to develop a new queen (instead of the queen doing it in purpose/strategy).

          We understand most of your questions quiet well. It’s been a long time since I studied biology and I’m not working in that field anymore so I won’t be able to give you most answers from memory, but if you are interested you will find a lot of research on those topics. It’s mostly really rather automatic responses through pheromone systems with involuntary responses. Especially the wars of ants are quite well understood in that regard.

          Cephalopod have different but also rather complex brain structures. Again - insects just completely lack higher brain anatomy. If you into those question I would highly recommend you to take an introductory lecture into neuroscience online. We don’t understand everything but we understand some things quiet well.

      • @Natanael@slrpnk.net
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        127 days ago

        This doesn’t explain complex behavior seen in many insects like how bumblebees can learn how to solve puzzles from watching other bees performing the solution (this requires a minimal degree of visual recognition of the same species, theory of mind to understand they have a goal and what it is, recognition of their actions and the ability to translate them to copy them, etc).

        Having a drastically different structure to their neurons doesn’t mean they can’t think.

        • @gap_betweenus@lemmy.world
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          327 days ago

          “Same” neurons (they don’t have all the neuron types we have but in general one can say it’s the same neurons), just no complex brain structures. You can have very complex behavior completely reliant on pheromone systems, quite well studied in ants. I’m not to familiar with bumblebees so I would need to look into literature, but for example simple learning already happens at molecular level and does not require any thinking at all.

  • @SlothMama@lemmy.world
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    2728 days ago

    I’ve always thought this, and thought it strange we assumed other creatures experienced lesser levels of sentience.

    • @capem@startrek.website
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      827 days ago

      Vegans are well aware of this phenomenon.

      People will tend to wave away atrocities by saying the victims “can’t feel it” or “don’t know what’s going on.”

      We see it all the time in things like the treatment of indigenous people and the mutilation of baby’s genitals.

    • @HauntedCupcake@lemmy.world
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      227 days ago

      I think it’s fair to assume they experience a “lesser” level of sentience. People just assume it’s a lot more lesser than it is

  • @gedaliyah@lemmy.worldM
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    2628 days ago

    This raises some interesting questions. The premise of these scientists is that consciousness can be quantified empirically. Yet many of the tests described in this article can be passed by machines. Does that mean that the scientists who signed the declaration consider some smart devices to demonstrate consciousness? And what are the implications?

    • @roguetrick@lemmy.world
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      427 days ago

      These arguments never make much sense because there’s no broadly accepted philosophical consensus on what sentience is.

      • @gedaliyah@lemmy.worldM
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        26 days ago

        I agree with this. I’ve read the statement that the scientists wrote and I honestly could not figure out what they are trying to say. I just don’t see how any of the tests they reference would challenge the idea that we don’t know how to define or test consciousness.

        Sentience is not necessarily the same thing but its in a similar place. It may be possible to test depending on the definition.

    • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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      127 days ago

      I’d hazard the guess they don’t, and it’s easy to justify it - our current AIs don’t have the internal aparatus needed to develop counsciousness (yet). They’re way too simple and way too straightforward to be intelligent, whether intelligence is an emergent property or a fundamental structure.

        • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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          True, you can’t test a literal rock and expect the result to be telling of counsciousness. Good thing the researchers aren’t solely determining it by testing behaviour, and instead selected a group in which emergent intelligence is one of the probable phenomena.

          • @gedaliyah@lemmy.worldM
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            127 days ago

            Is emergent intelligence the scientific definition of consciousness? The article seems to be describing something else.

            • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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              027 days ago

              Is emergent intelligence the scientific definition of consciousness?

              There exists no practical or effective difference.

  • @daltotron@lemmy.world
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    2527 days ago

    IS veganism the real solution here, or is the real solution the all-artificial, all-synthetic diet? Me personally, I’m going to down this jug of red 40, and then I think I’ll get back to you

    • Dark Arc
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      1927 days ago

      If it ever comes out that plants are sentient and feel pain my moral compass is going to have a bad day.

      I’m not even a vegetarian … but I have tried to eat less meat in recent years, in part because of the cruelty.

      • Veloxization
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        1527 days ago

        I’d say eating plants would still be the lesser of two evils in that case. Animals we kill for food also eat plants, so from a pure quantity of suffering, it’s better to not have the middleman there.

        • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          227 days ago

          But some animals we eat are carnivores, like most wild-caught fish. In which case, killing them reduces the total amount of suffering. Same reasoning as the trolley problem.

            • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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              27 days ago

              That wouldn’t apply to ecosystems where the predator is invasive, for example the lionfish in the Caribbean (which happens to be delicious).

              Furthermore, if there is concern for a population explosion then one could also kill and eat the predator’s prey, provided you eat fewer than the predator would have eaten.

          • Veloxization
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            226 days ago

            We, as omnivores, have a choice. The carnivores do not. I’d rather not cause more suffering than I have to (since I have that choice) even if there was the potential that it could possibly decrease overall suffering.

            I will not go into other problems with fish specifically since it’s not on-topic.

            • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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              26 days ago

              Whereas I choose to cause suffering if I expect it will reduce greater suffering, including killing animals if necessary.

              Everyone has their own approach to the trolley problem.

              • Veloxization
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                125 days ago

                Do note that this whole thing is based on the hypothetical of plants being capable of experiencing pain. In reality, they do not possess a nervous system to enable that.

                Of course I’d choose to kill an animal if the alternative was getting injured or killed (or starving in some extreme survival situation), but in day-to-day life, I do not see the need to do that.

                • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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                  25 days ago

                  If the only way to stop a school shooter were to kill them, I think most people would do so even if they were not personally threatened.

                  And many people, including myself, think it is moral to kill even an innocent person if necessary to prevent the death of a greater number of people. That’s the trolley problem in a nutshell.

                  But if I’m willing to kill a person in order to prevent them from killing other people, then I should also be willing to kill a fish in order to prevent it from killing other fish.

                  Finally, the argument for nonhuman sentience does not turn on the presence or absence of neurons. That would just be a cellular version of speciesism, and it inexplicably eliminates the possibility of sentience in extraterrestrials or machines.

                  The argument in the OP is based on behaviors, like recognizing self vs nonself, avoiding noxious stimuli, creative problem-solving, etc. Plants do many of these things too, just on longer timescales.

      • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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        727 days ago

        We can always go the way of only eating fruits (and fruit-like growths), as they’re specifically meant for being eaten.

          • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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            226 days ago

            Well, no. Milk is naturally produced for a limited period so a mammal can feed its young. Fruits are produced year-round every year so a plant can spread its seeds as far as possible.

            • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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              26 days ago

              Milk and fruit are both only produced for a limited time.

              For instance, many tomato plants only produce tomatoes for a few months of the year, and then they die.

              • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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                226 days ago

                Milk and fruit are both only produced for a limited time.

                By each individual plant, sure. But for diverse farming, you can easily get a permanent rotation of fruits going.

                You’re also completely ignoring the most importat fact - that milk is produced to feed newborns and fruit is produced to attract (and by extension feed) literally whichever species is around.

                • @FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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                  -226 days ago

                  No, fruit is produced to be eaten by animals who will ingest the seeds and defecate them somewhere suitable for growth. It is not meant to be eaten by animals who defecate in a toilet.

                  Regardless, animals and plants used in agriculture have been modified by selective breeding to suit human needs, so the milk and fruit they produce are now meant for humans. And human agricultural practices ensure a constant supply of both fruit and milk.

      • JackFrostNCola
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        627 days ago

        Im pretty sure i have read articles about study finding that show certain trees can communicate distress via pheromones or something when under attack by insects that strip their leaves and some plants give off a very faint ‘noise’ when they are dehydrated or distressed.

      • @chetradley@lemmy.world
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        427 days ago

        Considering how pain is a trigger for an animal’s fight or flight response, and considering plants can neither fight nor flee, it would seem like a cruel cosmic joke for plants to feel pain. What purpose would it serve, evolutionary speaking?

        • Dark Arc
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          327 days ago

          No idea; though I think a consciousness could be independent of whether or not something feels pain. For instance, there are people that don’t feel pain but they’re very much conscious and killing them wouldn’t be any more just simply because they don’t feel pain.

      • @Resonosity@lemmy.world
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        327 days ago

        Plants are autotrophs in that they create their own energy from the sun with the help of microbes in soils to supply nutrients to enable plants to do so.

        Imo, the closer we can descend on the food chain to autotrophic nutrition, the better for all.

        Of course, all of this has to be taken in balance. There needs to be a healthy discussion between domesticated and wilded lands.

        But much research has been published showing that if the world moved to primarily plant-based/vegan/herbivore/autotrophic diets, then we’d quickly move to living inside of our planet’s boundaries which we aren’t now. Think about rewilding corn fields or wheat fields or soy fields and still having enough food left over to feed the entire population.

        #govegan

        • Yeah the fresh cut grass smell is actually a call to aid. They “think” the damage is caused by herbivorous insects, so they release chemicals to attract carnivorous insects to come and kill the other insects.

          Plants probably qualify for a separate category of low sentience. If you’ve grown plants you know they’ll turn towards the sun, and you need to move them around a bit to make sure they don’t end up with a prominent lean. Some plants will use their tendrils to wrap around a trellis for extra support.

          I don’t think we can qualify these actions on the same level of sentience as animals, but there is certainly something there. All living things probably have some degree of this, since they react to stimulus with chemical signaling. That’s not terribly different from what we do.

    • @capem@startrek.website
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      1127 days ago

      Veganism is the solution, yes.

      Future generations will look back on us like we were crazy and barbaric for eating meat.

      • @TIMMAY@lemmy.world
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        1327 days ago

        I agree that veganism is/could be a good solution moving forward. I strongly disagree that eating meat can be considered barbaric, as it is completely natural and present in every corner of the animal kingdom. Now, how we treat the animals we get that meat from is absolutely barbaric and should be considered so, but I don’t think meat eating itself should be villainized, at least in a retrospective sense.

        • @festus@lemmy.ca
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          827 days ago

          Just because something is natural doesn’t mean it isn’t barbaric. Male lions will regularly kill cubs to make the mother ready for sex - that’s natural but we’d never accept (correctly) a human doing that.

          • @TIMMAY@lemmy.world
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            427 days ago

            I understand your point but I dont think that the male lion’s proclivity for infanticide is equivalent to human life simply because that is not a typical (i.e. natural) aspect of human society

            • @yetAnotherUser@feddit.de
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              627 days ago

              Most Stone Age human societies routinely practiced infanticide, and estimates of children killed by infanticide in the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras vary from 15 to 50 percent. Infanticide continued to be common in most societies after the historical era began, including ancient Greece, ancient Rome, the Phoenicians, ancient China, ancient Japan, Pre-Islamic Arabia, Aboriginal Australia, Native Americans, and Native Alaskans.

              Wikipedia: Infanticide

              • @TIMMAY@lemmy.world
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                527 days ago

                Well, it is always possible that I am under informed so I guess my argument may not stand, at least not on the grounds I have claimed. Thank you for the link, I will read about this.

            • @festus@lemmy.ca
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              427 days ago

              Rape then? Lots of animals rape and humans do so too. It’s ‘natural’ but barbaric.

      • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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        827 days ago

        Nah, synthetic food (and eventually discarding our gross meat shells for silicon and metal bodies) is the rightful path. On the way there, veganism is a nice stop-gap for most people.

  • @Simon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    27 days ago

    I thought this should be obvious to anyone who’s interacted with an animal, ever. But sadly there are a great many people who don’t agree there is a ‘soul behind the tv screen’ as it were with animals more primitive than things like cats and dogs. It can be easy to use to justify human cruelty.

    And it’s easy for you to say it’s obvious and you’ve thought that all along. You’re not the demographic they’re trying to inform.

    • @Shou@lemmy.world
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      -326 days ago

      I found that too many people who call themselves a dog person because they are terrible with animals. Dogs have been bred to put up with us. But give them a dog that’s either bred for a specific task, or one that is a bit feral and they’ll say the dog is difficult. It isn’t, the owner is just incompetent.

      I’m no dog or cat person. It’s easier for me to name the animals I hate (damn mosquito’s). I get along with most animals, even instant-swatting cats labelled as difficult. Only because I respect their boundaries. And I’ve stuck my hand behind a fence to pet a pitbull more often than a sane person would consider healthy.

      I think that pet breeding should be banned and only allowed by veterinairy instances, universities and animal shelters. Imagine if people couldn’t buy a pet on a whim? Imagine if they had to order in advance and get certified they know how to take care of one? We’d have less animal cruelty, and less strays.

      Also, sheep are underrated pets. Holy damn they are social. They are basically a walking pillow and love scratches behind the horns. And wag their tail when happy. Same for rats. I say rats are more suitable as pets than dogs. Social, fun, trainable (be warned of the lazy males), don’t bite, love cuddles, and you don’t need to castrate them to “keep their fun behaviour.” You do have to remove the ovaria as it makes female rats prone to cancer otherwise.

      • @FarFarAway@startrek.website
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        326 days ago

        I’m gonna have to pass on the sheep, well at least the males. We had one, as a companion to a horse, and the damn thing would head butt us half the time and try to hump us the other. We had to carry a stick in just to feed it, or risk ending up with a line of spooge down our backs. It wasn’t right.

        Rats, on the other hand, are great pets. More people should give rats a chance.

      • @SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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        026 days ago

        I’m a dog person because between cats and dogs, I lack respect for cats. Yes they are cute and soft and sometimes cuddly. It’s not worth the ammonia smell everywhere and the scratching me when they come to me for pets, or the biting, clawing furniture, etc. Mostly the pee in the house.

        I’ve done the things like changing the litter box and using new litter frequently. I’ve given them off limits spaces so they aren’t bothered. I’ve done the things and more. My daughter still has a cat downstairs. I’m not a jerk to the cat, but I just don’t like cats. I’ll pet, hold, play, etc. Cats are simply not a favorite for me.

        Dogs… Ok the other hand… Obnoxious playful dopey friends that can learn cool things. Big cuddle bugs is what they are.

        • @Shou@lemmy.world
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          126 days ago

          You share the same problem with the “too many people calling themselves dog people.” You state you lack respect to an animal, and then complain about said animal who is known to fight when threatened. That cat can tell you don’t like him, and so he doesn’t like you. Similar with horses. Just like many other animals, they sense your emotions. Except horses are very very good at it, and cats much less so.

          • @SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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            125 days ago

            I mean… The cat in the house is still our cat. We love him and have had him for 10+ years. He’s chill and tromps around the house. Sometimes plays and sometimes cuddles with everyone. I love the cat but I generally don’t like cats.

            I’m not sure I follow what you’re putting down. I don’t feel like it applies to me.

  • @juicy@lemmy.today
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    1827 days ago

    In the 17th century, the French philosopher René Descartes argued that animals were merely “material automata” — lacking souls or consciousness.

    I believe we’re all “material automata.” The mistake isn’t thinking animals are more primitive than they are, but thinking we are more sophisticated than we are. We’re nothing special.

    • @chetradley@lemmy.world
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      1827 days ago

      The question is not, Can they reason?, nor Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being?

      Jeremy Bentham, 1789