Animal Minds | Radiolab Podcast
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- Опубликовано: 19 июл 2024
- From the Radiolab podcast: A rescued whale appears to find a way to say thanks. Do our dogs really feel guilt? And can a successful predator leopard seal fall head over heels for its photographer?
In this hour of Radiolab, stories of cross-species communication. When we gaze into the eyes of a wild animal, or even a beloved pet, can we ever really know what they might be thinking? Is it naive to assume they're experiencing something close to human emotions? Or is it ridiculous to assume that they AREN'T feeling something like that? We get the story of a rescued whale that may have found a way to say thanks, ask whether dogs feel guilt, and wonder if a leopard seal may have fallen in love with a National Geographic magazine photographer. What is it exactly are these animals thinking?
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Episode Segments:
0:00 Intro
0:18 Animal Blessings
3:45 A Whale Of a Tale
15:05 Do Our Dogs Really Feel Guilt?
21:58 Spindle Cells
37:16 Getting In With the Gander
48:14 Sharing is Caring?
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Guests in the episode include: Mick Menago, Tim Young: Tim Young, James Moskito, Holly Drewyard, Clive Wynn, Alexandra Horowitz, Patrick Hoff, Paul Theroux and Paul Nicklen.
Images: The pets of Team Radiolab. Collage by W. Harry Fortuna & Andrea Latimer.
Video by Kim Nowacki. Животные
I'm a wildlife biologist for the USDA and about 12 years ago I was walking through the woods on a day off (I wasn't working). It was an area I had never been to before. I had been crashing through some pretty dense brush and broke out into a clearing. I sat on a stump to catch my breath when a black bear appeared and started walking towards me. She wasn't huge, maybe 300lbs but I noticed that she was limping. She walked right up to me and then I saw that she had a piece of barbed wire wrapped around her leg and under her back paw. She turn that leg towards me and stood there. I reached over and unwrapped it. She turned around to face me and touched her nose to my hand and then left. During the entire interaction my brain kind of shut off and I reacted with instinct. I do not believe in anthropomorphism but that bear came to me for help, acknowledged what I did and left without attacking me or running which would be its natural instinct. You can throw science at me all day long (I do have a masters degree and 25 years of experience) and tell me there is no evidence that animals have emotions, but all you have to do is observe them in the wild. You will see love, concern, anger, fear. Does a bear love the way I do? I don't know, but then again not even humans experience feelings the same way.
Incredible story! I am always in awe when approached by wild animals.
This is freaking awesome. I always struggled to understand a lot of dialogues in the show cuz I'm not a native speaker. As soon as I saw there's a channel, I instantly wished there were subs. Thank you soo much. This makes my experience of listening sooo much better. Love you guys n
Why no pictures of the whale or other parts of the stories?
Always brings a tear to my eye
Beem listening to these guys since 2007. This show and Wait wait are the reason o loved npr.
This was a very powerful story. Regardless of the details and reasons, species seem to be able to connect.
This is very cool. I'm happy I found this podcast very interesting,intriguing,and gives things a different perspective for animals thoughts and emotion.
Amazed. Wow .🦭❤
Omg, I can not believe this is really happening! I'm making the third ever comment on the launch video for the RUclips incarnation of the show also? Wow, just wow. I've been listening to RL religiously for almost decade now. I started to listen to the show as soon as
the show was available in Florida which I believe was via smartphone podcasts. I dunno the exact details because it's been so very long now. Regardless I'm super stoked about all the new content that will be available for my favorite episodes over the years. You've got my subscription!
"First it became detached from me, then aggressive toward me, than needed me."
So it became a teenager?
The guilty dog look experiment missed the real science implications for humans. Do humans accused of crimes "act" guilty even when they are totally innocent? Yes! Innocent humans confess to crimes they have not committed all the time. Emotions are not species specific to humans. Whatever emotions are felt are specific to that individual. One human can never feel what another human feels. Impossible. We can try to imagine what someone else feels...that is called empathy.
the dog is reacting to the disapproval... not confessing to a crime ... so to speak..