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Anthropomorphism, Anecdotes and Animals
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Foreword Frans B. M. de Waal Acknowledgments PART I. ATTITUDES, HISTORY, AND CULTURE 1. Taking Anthropomorphism and Anecdotes Seriously Robert W. Mitchell, Nicholas S. Thompson, and H. Lyn Miles 2. Dogs, Darwinism, and English Sensibilities Elizabeth Knoll 3. Why Anthropomorphism Is Not Metaphor: Crossing Concepts and Cultures in Animal Behavior Studies Pamela J. Asquith PART II. THE NATURE OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM 4. Amorphism, Mechanomorphism, and Anthropomorphism Emanuela Cenami Spada 5. Anthropomorphism: A Definition and a Theory Stewart Elliott Guthrie 6. Why Anthropomorphize? Folk Psychology and Other Stories Linnda R. Caporael and Cecilia M. Heyes PART III. ANTHROPOMORPHISM AND MENTAL STATE ATTRIBUTION 7. Anthropomorphism and the Evolution of Social Intelligence: A Comparative Approach Gordon G. Gallup Jr., Lori Marino, and Timothy J. Eddy 8. Panmorphism Daniel J. Povinelli 9. Anthropomorphism and Scientific Evidence for Animal Mental States Hugh Lehman 10. Anthropomorphism in Mother-Infant Interaction: Cultural Imperative or Scientific Acumen? Robert L. Russell PART IV. ANECTODES AND ANTHROPOMORPHISM 11. Anecdote, Anthropomorphism, and Animal Behavior Bernard E. Rollin 12. What's the Use of Anecdotes? Distinguishing Psychological Mechanisms in Primate Tactical Deception Richard W. Byrne 13. Anthropomorphic Anecdotalism As Method Robert W. Mitchell 14. A Pragmatic Approach to the Inference of Animal Mind Paul S. Silverman PART V. INTENTIONALITY 15. Varieties of Purposive Behavior Ruth Garrett Millikan 16. Expressions of Mind in Animal Behavior Colin Beer PART VI. CONSCIOUSNESS AND SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS 17. Self-Awareness, with Specific References to Coleoid Cephalopods Martin H. Moynihan 18. Silent Partners? Observations on Some Systematic Relations among Observer Perspective, Theory, and Behavior Duane Quiatt 19. Common Sense and the Mental Lives of Animals: An Empirical Approach Harold A. Herzog and Shelley Galvin 20. Amending Tinbergen: A Fifth Aim for Ethology Gordon M. Burghardt 21. A Phenomenological Approach to the Study of Nonhuman Animals Kenneth J. Shapiro 22. Anthropomorphism, Anecdotes, and Mirrors Karyl B. Swartz and Sian Evans PART VII. COGNITION 23. Cognitive Ethology: Slayers, Skeptics, and Proponenets Marc Bekoff and Colin Allen 24. Animal Cognition Versus Animal Thinking: The Anthropomorphic Error Hank Davis 25. Anthropomorphism Is the Null Hypothesis and Recapitulationism Is the Bogeyman in Comparative Developmental Evolutionary Studies Sue Taylor Parker PART VIII. LANGUAGE 26. Anthropocentrism and the Study of Animal Language Judith Kiriazis and Con N. Slobodchikoff 27. Pinnipeds, Porpoises, and Parsimony: Animal Language Research Viewed from a Bottom-up Perspective Ronald J. Schusterman and Robert C. Gisiner 28. Anthropomorphism, Apes, and Language H. Lyn Miles PART IX. COMPARING PERSPECTIVES 29. Anthropomorphism and Anecdotes: A Guide for the Perplexed Robert W. Mitchell List of Contributors References Indexes

About the Author

Robert W. Mitchell is Associate Professor of Psychology at Eastern Kentucky University and co-edited Deception: Perspectives on Human and Nonhuman Deceit, also published by SUNY Press. Nicholas S. Thompson is Professor of Psychology and Ethology at Clark University and editor of the Perspectives in Ethology series of Plenum Press. H. Lyn Miles is UC Foundation Professor of Anthropology at the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga and Director of Project Chantek.

Reviews

"...a thoughtful work which can provide valuable insights for the non-scientist." - H-Net Reviews (H-Nilas) "It is rare when opponents of anthropomorphism can be brought to offer explicit arguments for their stance yet, several have done so here. Just bringing the two sides together for a debate makes this anthology extremely valuable. Another tremendously valuable feature is the enormous breadth of the sub-topics covered, e.g., the articles that try to explain the nature and function of anthropomorphism, as opposed to the related topic of whether it is valid as a way of thinking about animals and explaining their behavior. "The topic is very significant, both because of the controversy in fields that are devoted to explaining animal behavior and because of the wide-ranging ramifications going beyond animal mentality to the question of how we understand human behavior and mentality. Thus, I think it is also relevant to philosophy of mind which, until recently, treated as peripheral the question of animal mentality." - John Andrew Fisher, University of Colorado, Boulder "What I find compelling is that all of the essays have raised important challenges to the way we view ourselves and other species, and many of them have subsequently attempted to identify alternative approaches. This collection is intellectual in that the authors have attempted to explore their own belief systems, as well as challenged readers to do likewise." - Jo Liska, University of Colorado, Denver

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