I put this down to Data at times thinking like a tin-can and not the human being that he always strived to be, but never quite managed it.
Cats, like most mammals, are certainly sentient.
Cats are aware that they exist. And their ego is their world. Whether they are aware that anyone else exists is another question however!
Cats are aware that they exist. And their ego is their world. Whether they are aware that anyone else exists is another question however!
But it is a related question. If cats are only aware of themselves but are unable to perceive themselves in the third person, to have ethics, sympathy or the ability to ignore their natural instincts, they are not sentient in the meaning of the word as is defined by Star Trek (and there's no reason to think the definition of the word sentience may not change to mean that in 2-300 years).
Those mirror studies are fundamentally flawed and assume that the tested species could "recognize" itself using it's visual senses as a human would. It's fine if you get confirmatory results (e.g., the animal does recognize itself in the mirror), but really says nothing about the animal if you get a negative result.Is your cat aware of who he is? Would he he recognize himself in a mirror? Does he know his place in the world and in the universe? Does he know the difference between himself and another cat it meets on the street? Most animals are not self-aware. They only function on instinct and have no higher brain functions.
That assumption is a decade or two behind the times. Animal behavioral studies in recent years have called that assumption very much into question, as we've discovered that many cognitive processes we liked to think were exclusive to us are found in other animals as well, and that many animals have behaviors that can't be reduced to mindless instinct. There is no sharp divide between how humans think and how other animals think. We're just one part of a continuum. Our cognitive abilities and behaviors are different in degree than those of other animals, but every one of them can be found to some extent in other species.
And for the record, every cat knows the difference between itself and another cat. Cats are extremely territorial. So even if the rest of your point were valid, that would be a poorly chosen example.
(And of course every cat knows its place in the universe: the exact center.)
Which behavioral studies? I know of studies on apes, which show certain things that are unique to apes, not all animals. Apes can recognize themselves in a mirror and know the difference between themselves and other apes. Cats are different. Cats attack their own tails and they attack mirrors... they don't appear to be aware of themselves because they think every cat is another cat, including their own body and the cat in the mirror. So I think it's still true that most animals are not self-aware.
Cats are not aware of themselves a cat does not think in terms of "me" or "my"...
A cat has no concept of its own exsistance, it doesn't understand who it is, what it is, or understand the concept of death, what that means and what could lie beyond. It only understands instinct. It only understands "this dog poses a threat, I should defend myself."
If a cat is self-aware and a sentient/sapient shouldn't we feel guilty for enslaving them in our homes for our entertainment and emotional needs?
Cats are smart creatures in the respect of the order of beings on this planet and are capable of much. But they cannot learn and cannot expand.
A cat is never going to cure a disease, create art or even express a true, deep, feeling of love.
Sure, animals and pets show "love" but it's no where near as complex as the human version of it.
An animal curling up on your lap for comfort when you're feverish, or dying of a "broken heart" when its master dies is orders of magnitude different that what humans feel when it comes to love.
Human feel deep, emotional, connections with their mates. Connections that bond and last for a lifetime. A cat mates out of instinct.
There's a reason why humans run this planet and are at the top of the food chain. Our brains run on a whole other level andour existance is on a whole other level. Saying a cat is anywhere near the same as a human in terms of sentience/sapience is like saying Eniac could be a webserver.
I also take issue with the fact of ascribing personality traits on to animals based on how we precieve them.
I do to the point that something that is considered property isn't.You don't understand the word 'sentient'.
I do to the point that something that is considered property isn't.
By law something that is considered sentient can't be bought, sold or owned.
Pets are considered property.
Yes that is true.By that definition slaves only become sentient after slavery is outlawed by local, regional or national law.
Then please, enlighten me.It doesn't absolve you of being ignorant of the meaning of 'sentient'.
I do to the point that something that is considered property isn't.
By law something that is considered sentient can't be bought, sold or owned.
Pets are considered property.
By that definition slaves only become sentient after slavery is outlawed by local, regional or national law.
Such legal positivism rarely constitutes a convincing argument.
Yes that is true.
It's common knowledge that slaves were viewed as animals and not as human beings during slavery, which is why they could be legally bought and sold. Due to the Amanicipation Proclimation, slaves were not only freed but given recognition as sentient beings in all States in the America.
Y'see, this is what I'm talking about...a thread about a TV android's cat leads to someone being subtly accused of supporting slavery.
ugh.
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