- Anecdotal cognitivism
Anecdotal cognitivism is a psychological theory and
animal cognition term which entails attribution of mental states to animals on the basis of anecdotes, and on the observation of particular cases, other than those observations made during controlled experiments. It is opposed tobehaviorism , and behaviorists are very critical of anecdotal cognitivism, suggesting that controlled experiments are necessary to correctly measure stimuli and record observable behavior. Anecdotal cognitivism is often criticized by behaviorists using specific cases, such as that ofClever Hans , to discredit using anecdotal evidence in assessinganimal cognition . [http://www.yorku.ca/andrewsk/documents/Keeley_Anthropomorphism.pdf] In the case ofClever Hans , ahorse was purported to be able to add and subtract using its hooves, and even answer questions surroundingEuropean politics , but it was determined by later research that the horse's owner was in fact unknowinglycueing thehorse , and that when he was removed from the room, thehorse would not respond.Anecdotal cognitivists respond to behaviorists by saying that
behaviorism would have the animals 'lose their minds', and that it is clear that by observation we can know a great deal about the cognitive processes of animals, and that the debate can start here, with simple observation, and not in a controlled setting or in a lab.Notable anecdotal cognitivists
*
Charles Darwin
*Donald Griffin
*George Romanes ee also
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Anecdotal evidence
*Animism
*Behaviorism
*Clever Hans External links
* [http://www.asas.org/jas/papers/1998/jan/jan42.pdf Allen, Colin (1998) "Assessing Animal Cognition: Ethological and Philosophical Perspectives" "Journal of Animal Science" 76: pp. 42-47;]
* [http://peace.saumag.edu/faculty/kardas/courses/CS/Student%20Pages/Animal%20Cognition/AnimalCognition2000 Watson, Amy and Woodworth, Kristen (2000) "Animal Cognition"] - outline of animal cognition;
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