Originally posted by m0rbid
Try with a dog, stare at him in the eyes, and he'll get bored in a mather of seconds...
Not all dogs! I have a husky/queensland mix that loves nothing more than to stare you in the face. I have had staring matches with her that have
ended in a draw, and some that she has won. I also have a Lab/Pit/Shepherd mix that has separation-anxiety and is afraid of the dark. Go
figure!
As for determining which is the most intelligent species, I often wonder if we are able to judge that. I mean, our basis for measuring intelligence
is based on our understanding of what defines intelligence. What if animals are really more intelligent than us according to their own intelligence
scale? What if they think that we are stupid because we don't meet their expectations for intelligence? I think that dolphins are probably the most
intelligent species, maybe more than humans even.
Nineteen centuries ago, Plutarch, a Greek moralist and biographer made this statement: "to the dolphin alone, beyond all other, nature has granted
what the best philosophers seek: friendship for no advantage". In our own times Barbara Tufty made the comment "he [Dolphins] also exhibits a
friendly willingness to cooperate with other earth creatures -- a rare attribute which another animal, Homo Sapiens, has not yet learned to do with
any consistency".
In 1962 Dr. Dreher and Dr. Evans were aboard the research vessel Sea Quest, 300 miles south of San Diego, studying gray whales. They had strung a
number of vertical aluminum poles and microphones inside Scammon's Lagoon, erecting a type of barrier. A short time later five Pacific Bottle-nosed
dolphins were spotted about 500 yards from the barrier. After a few minutes of what was labeled conversation, a scout was sent from the group.
Microphones picked up his sonar soundings as he closely surveyed the poles. When he returned to the pod an explosion of whistles, chirps and Bronx
cheer-like noises were recorded via microphones. After several minutes of conversation the dolphins proceeded through the barrier and into the bay.
Dr. John C. Lilly, who has provided extensive research on dolphins, performed the following two experiments which I consider well worthy of notice.
Using a mind probe set in the brain, which when stimulated with an electrical current gave the dolphin a rewarding sensation, Dr. Lilly set up a
switch where Dolphin #6 could reward himself by pushing a lever. "While I was assembling it, I noticed that the dolphin was closely watching what I
was doing. Almost before I could finish assembling and placing the rods necessary to push the switch (which was out of the water above the animal),
the dolphin started pushing on the rod. By the time the switch was connected to the rest of the apparatus he had learned the proper way to push
it."
There was no random or apparent accidental contacts before the dolphin learned how. The same thing happened with three different dolphins. They seemed
to anticipate the purpose of the switch. Probably from seeing him push it and connecting the push to the reward. Dr. Lilly had used this same
technique on monkeys and made the statement that it usually took a chimp about 100 random tries before he learned to push the button, and then a few
more to learn how to push the button.
Dr. Lilly was attempting to make Dolphin #8 whistle a burst of a given pitch, duration and intensity in order to obtain a reward. The dolphin quickly
caught on. Every time he whistled his blowhole would move and a whistle would be emitted. Then Dr. Lilly noticed that the dolphin had added a new rule
to the game. He was raising the pitch of each subsequent whistle. Suddenly, the blowhole twitched, but no sound. He had passed our hearing range. No
sound-- no reward. Dolphin #8 emitted two more supersonic twitches and the third was hearable. From that time on he did not go out of Dr. Lilly's
acoustic range. The Dolphin had determined what his hearing range was and stayed within it.
Another dolphin was taped, after Dr. Lilly said "the TRR is now ten per second" (train repetition rate) repeating "TRR" in a high pitched, Donald
Duck, quacking-like voice. The same dolphin also picked out "three hundred and twenty three" and also mimicked every laugh laughed in the lab at
that time.
Dolphins have no prehensile extremities; hence their intelligence has never gone in the direction of manipulating their environment --
their
thoughts have been left to develop inward. Hence their culture would be totally different from ours.
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