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Exploring the Intriguing Inner Lives of Animals with Dr. Jonathan Balcombe - P3/3
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Animals enjoy their food,
they enjoy
their social company.
They have leisure time,
they can relax.
Their lives are rich and
their lives are worth living.
And that needs
to affect the way
we interact with them.
Halo, caring viewers
and welcome to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Today we continue with
the concluding episode
of our 3-part series,
“Exploring the Intriguing
Inner Lives of Animals with
Dr. Jonathan Balcombe.”
Dr. Jonathan Balcombe
is a leading behavioral
research scientist
and author of
“The Use of Animals
in Higher Education:
Problems, Alternatives
and Recommendations,”
“Pleasurable Kingdom:
Animals and the Nature
of Feeling Good”
and “Second Nature:
The Inner Lives
of Animals.”
A new book
by Dr. Balcombe
will be released in May
titled, “The Exultant Ark
– A Pictorial Tour
of Animal Pleasure.”
As a respected speaker,
Dr. Balcombe has travelled
around the globe,
giving presentations and
raising awareness about
the values, psychology,
intelligence and emotions
of our animal friends.
He has written
numerous scientific
papers and articles
published in prestigious
academic journals
and magazines such as
the “Journal of
Applied Animal
Welfare Science,”
“British Medical Journal,”
“Journal of
Consciousness Studies,”
“Animal Behavior,”
“Canadian Field-Naturalist”
and many others.
Dr. Balcombe has said,
“As science continues
to make new discoveries
about animal minds
and feelings,
I hope it strikes a chord
for more considerate,
ethical treatment
of animals.”
There’s a lot of
really important things
that humans need to
understand and respect
about animals, but
the key one is this word,
“sentience.”
And sentience is the ability
to feel things,
to feel good things,
to feel bad things,
to feel pain,
to feel pleasure.
And so, my message
about animals
is that they have lives
that matter to them.
And so therefore we need
to respect their lives.
And the closer
we look at animals,
the more we study them,
the more we realize just
how complex they are.
During his research
while in graduate school,
Dr. Balcombe studied
a large group of bats
who lived together
inside a small, dark cave.
Through his observations,
he noted
how these animals have
an amazingly intricate
communication system.
I studied these
flying mammals and
how they communicate
with each other, how
they listen to other bats,
and get information about
where to find some food,
and also
how they recognize
each other’s voices,
as we can, to link up
when they need to.
A mother needs
to find her baby,
for instance,
or the baby’s hungry,
so the baby calls and
the mother hears the baby,
and they find each other
that way.
In his book,
“Second Nature:
The Inner Lives
of Animals,”
Dr. Balcombe refers to
many other studies on
animal communication.
Dr. Con Slobodchikoff,
an ethologist
and biology professor
from Northern Arizona
University
in the United States,
has studied prairie dogs
for over 30 years and
believes they may have
the most sophisticated
communication system
than any other mammal.
Prairie dogs have over
a 100 calls, with modifiers.
And poignantly,
they have a call
for a man carrying a gun.
So animals respond to
our presence,
and they respond
in complex, flexible ways.
We need
to respect them more.
We need
to treat them better.
We need to be aware
that they want
to live their lives too,
like we do ours.
In addition to
learning about
communication skills,
many researchers are
discovering other aspects
of animal intelligence.
Dr. Balcombe describes
a scientific study
on scrub jays which
revealed their remarkable
long term memories.
Scrub jays are
a relative of crows,
a North American bird.
And they have been shown
to have what’s called
episodic memory.
That is,
they can remember
the what, the when, and
the where of a past event.
In this study, a scrub jay
was given a pile of peanuts
and they were allowed
to bury them.
By the way,
this is a caching species.
This is a species
that buries food and
comes back to it later.
The scrub jays were then
given a much more
perishable food,
which they also buried.
The birds were then
kept away from the area
for over a week.
Upon their return,
the scrub jays did not
even bother trying to
recover the perishable food,
apparently realizing
that it would already
have spoiled.
Instead they headed
directly to the side
where they had hidden
the peanuts, which
do not spoil as quickly.
So they remember
what they buried,
where they buried it,
and how long ago it was,
and how much time
has elapsed.
So it’s a pretty impressive
cognitive feat.
Animals possess
considerable innate wisdom
and are able to pass along
their knowledge
and culture
from one generation
to the next.
There’s actually
a term called
zoopharmacognosy.
And zoopharmacognosy
is the specialized study of
self-medication in animals.
You know, animals
live in their habitats,
they know different plants,
they know where to find
certain fruiting trees
at certain times of year.
And they also learn
through trial and error
over the course of
evolution and
cultural evolution,
they learn which plants
can make them feel better.
Chimpanzees use many
different kinds of plants
to self-medicate, and
many other animals do this.
It was once thought
that animals live only
in the present
and their actions
were all based on
an instinct to survive.
However,
scientific evidence shows
that animals are
capable of experiencing
happiness and sorrow
just as humans do.
Baboon mothers
who lose an infant
have been found
to show a physiological
and a behavioral response
that mirrors
those of humans,
in particular, women
who have lost an infant.
We know
that is a terrible loss.
We grieve for long periods.
That’s reflected
in increased
glucocorticoid hormones
in our bloodstream.
And we can measure that.
It goes up
for about a month,
and it gradually subsides.
Time is our friend,
when we are recovering
from grief and bereavement.
Well, a baboon mother
who loses an infant
shows the same sort of
hormonal changes.
It goes up
for about a month
and gradually subsides.
And they also
respond behaviorally
by expanding
their social networks.
They engage in
a lot more grooming
with each other, receiving
and giving grooming.
It’s thought
to be a form of therapy.
And these are the terms
the scientists used
to describe it.
And it is, I think,
analogous to the way
we rally around socially
when a loved one
is ill or lost.
We send flowers,
we send cards,
we bring soup over,
we rally round morally.
And by the way,
the baboon mother
is not the only one
to show this response.
These hormones also
go up to a lesser degree,
in their closest friends
and associates in
the baboon community.
These studies show
that they can have
moods and dispositions,
emotional tenors
that last for days
or weeks or months,
possibly years.
In his next book,
“The Exultant Ark –
A Pictorial Tour
of Animal Pleasure,”
Dr. Balcombe seeks
to show that animals
not only have emotions,
but they experience
pleasure and happiness.
At times, birds fly
for the pure pleasure of
soaring through the skies;
monkeys help
groom each other
because it feels good and
elephants engage in play
for the simple joy of it.
Animals also are
pleasure seekers.
They are not just
pain avoiders.
There are many ways
that animals
experience pleasure,
through food,
through touch,
through their everyday
communications.
If you live with
dogs or cats, you know
they feel pleasure.
You rub their belly,
they come running for it.
Maybe not a scientific
study, but it’s pretty clear
that these animals
like the touch, and they
probably enjoy their food
and other pleasures
in their lives.
Well, rats have been shown
to love touch as well.
In one study,
two groups of rats.
Rats who are expecting
to be petted on the back
will come
to be petted by the hand.
But rats
who are expecting to be
flipped on their back
and tickled on the belly,
which rats do to each other
when they’re young,
and when they play fight,
they will come running,
scientists love
to measure things,
they will come running
to the hand four times
as quickly and
they will utter about
on average 7 times
more ultrasonic chirps
which are associated
with positive effect in rats.
So rats love a belly rub
as much as cats do
apparently.
As a vegan himself,
Dr. Balcombe works for
the dignified treatment
of animals and strives to
raise awareness about
the sentient and intelligent
nature of animals.
The way we treat animals
right now when
we raise them for food
and it's not very ethical,
given the capacities
that animals have.
The slave trade,
civil rights,
suffragist movement,
those are largely now
relegated to
the history books.
We've made huge strides
in conquering those
past wrongs based on
“might makes right”.
Unfortunately,
we're still in the dark ages
with animals largely.
We still legally define them
as property, and we still,
kill huge numbers.
If you want
to help animals,
the best way one can do it
as an individual
is to stop eating them.
I'm hopeful that
we, humans, humankind,
will look back
on the 21st century
as the century
for the animals.
From his books, articles
and seminars,
Dr. Balcombe presents
the scientific evidence
that animals are
living, emotional,
cognizant beings,
with the hopes
that they will be treated
compassionately as beings
with equal rights to
happiness and freedom.
So, part of my message,
and part of
Supreme Master Ching Hai’s
message about animals,
is that animals celebrate
life, animals enjoy life,
animals have
positive experiences.
They enjoy their days.
They seek out good things.
Supreme Master Ching Hai,
who has also
spoken extensively
about the intelligence
and dignity of our
animal co-inhabitants,
is hopeful for a gentler
world of kindness
and compassion, wherein
the divinity in all beings
is recognized and respected.
They are living beings
just like us.
When you look into
the eyes of animals,
sometimes you will realize,
“My God! We are equal.
We are the same.”
And that feeling
will send shivers
all over your body,
and give you
an enlightenment
that you would never
dream of having.
I told you that animals
can also teach you,
flowers and trees
and everything.
In the Bible,
you remember?
God said that,
"I made animals to
help you, as your helper,
as your friend.”
Remember?
That's why we should
never eat them,
not mistreat them.
So, everything
on this planet, including us,
is inter-related
and helping each other
to make our lives here
comfortable and livable.
Our heartfelt thanks,
Dr. Jonathan Balcombe,
for sharing your expertise
on the profound,
inner lives of our
animal co-inhabitants.
We wish you
every success in
all your noble endeavors
as we unite towards a
peaceful and vegan planet
where all live
in safety and happiness.
For more information on
Dr. Jonathan Balcombe,
please visit:
We enjoyed
your company today for
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Enlightening Entertainment,
right after
Noteworthy News.
Blessed be
your loving heart
as you walk
the honorable way of saints.
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