Carl Safina: What are animals thinking and feeling?
Carl Safina's writing explores the scientific, moral and social dimensions of our relationship with nature. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
what animals think and feel?
or does she just want a treat?
that our dog really loves us,
do they love us?
to ask animals.
only of the human mind.
doing with those brains?
we can look at their brains
our brain is inherited.
to the first chordates.
to the first vertebrates.
a nerve cell, looks the same
about the minds of crayfish?
if you give a crayfish
to come out of its burrow,
we care about crayfish anxiety?
as well as do most apes
intelligence of this invertebrate?
into a crevice in the coral,
a moray eel is sleeping
to the moray, "Follow me,"
and get the fish,
and the grouper may get it.
have just recently found out about.
that ancient partnership?
a lot more about us
from what they're doing
which is called teaching.
and killer whales share food.
in stock, off the shelf,
of the deep sweep of time.
compared to a chimpanzee brain,
a very big chimpanzee brain.
because we're also really insecure.
all right, well, we see brains,
have to say about minds?
under the palm trees
of what they're doing
on the same plains,
of the same dangers,
and we became who we are.
these elephants as being relaxed.
concerned about something.
the voices of tourists
from a speaker hidden in bushes,
because tourists never bother elephants.
in confrontations at water holes,
and run away from the hidden speaker.
that there are humans,
different kinds of humans,
and some are dangerous.
than we have been watching them.
find food, try to stay alive.
in the hills of Africa
we are basically the same.
it makes you unconscious,
no sensation of anything.
the thing that feels like something.
if you're aware of anything,
that make humans humans,
to match moods with your companions.
you need to hurry up.
is contagious fear.
startle and fly away,
like everything else in life,
and has its elaboration.
you feel sad, it makes me sad.
that I call sympathy,
has just passed away.
but I get it; I know what you feel
to act on sympathy,
that makes us human,
we kill them and we eat them.
well, those are different species.
and humans are predators.
too well either.
only one thing about animal behavior
human thoughts and emotions
and emotions to other species
they're doing and how they're feeling,
are basically the same as ours.
mood and motivation in us
are hungry when they're hunting
their tongues are hanging out,
with their children
be experiencing anything.
that other animals can think and feel?"
through all the hundreds
that I put in my book
was right in the room with me.
and comes over to me --
and exposes her belly,
"I would like my belly rubbed.
because we're family.
and it will feel good."
more complicated than that.
and we say, "Oh look, killer whales,
we create an awful lot of it.
of the Mediterranean Sea
strongholds of elephant range
into little shards.
that we are driving to extinction,
magnificent creature on land.
of our wildlife in the United States.
we killed every single wolf.
south of the Canadian border, actually.
did that in the 1920s,
they had to bring them back,
had gotten out of control.
to see the wolves,
visible wolves in the world.
this incredible family of wolves.
and the young of several generations.
pack in Yellowstone National Park.
just outside the border,
descended into sibling rivalry.
to rejoin her family.
because they were jealous of her.
from two new males,
outside the park and getting shot.
being ejected from his own family.
his hunting support,
they hurt us more than they do?
part of a grey whale
who had killed that whale.
had nothing at all to fear.
into three pieces with two companions.
as the people in the boat.
to researchers lost in thick fog
was right there on the shoreline?
named Denise Herzing,
and they know her.
She knows who they all are.
They recognize the research boat.
it's a big happy reunion.
didn't want to come near the boat,
what was going on
of the people onboard had died
that one of the human hearts
all of the things that are going on
dolphin named Dolly.
a keeper took a cigarette break
into their pool, smoking.
nursed for a minute or two,
that enveloped her head like smoke.
to represent smoke.
to represent another,
that we think make us human.
and their minds have,
that has ever been on this planet,
all jumbled up together.
that makes us human.
who care about our mates.
who care about our children.
sometimes ten thousand miles
one meal, one big meal,
in the oceans of the world,
to the next is the chain of being.
and into that sacred relationship
have plastic in them now.
ready to fledge --
we are supposed to have
ourselves after our brains,
human life into the world,
into the company of other creatures.
that we are not alone.
in every painting of Noah's ark,
is in mortal danger now,
let them continue?
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Carl Safina - Ecologist, writerCarl Safina's writing explores the scientific, moral and social dimensions of our relationship with nature.
Why you should listen
Carl Safina explores how the ocean is changing and what those changes mean for wildlife and for people.
Safina is author of seven books, including Song for the Blue Ocean, which was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, Eye of the Albatross, Voyage of the Turtle and The View From Lazy Point. Safina is founding president of The Safina Center at Stony Brook University, where he also co-chairs the University's Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science. A winner of the 2012 Orion Award and a MacArthur Prize, among others, his work has been featured in outlets such as The New York Times, National Geographic, CNN.com and The Huffington Post, and he hosts “Saving the Ocean” on PBS.
His latest book, Beyond Words: What Animals Think And Feel, explores the inner lives of animals.
Carl Safina | Speaker | TED.com