Wild Justice
Honor and Fairness among Beasts at Play
by Marc Bekoff and Jessica Pierce
[Article Abstract]
This essay challenges science's traditional taboo against anthropomorphizing animals
or considering their behavior as indicative of feelings similar to human emotions.
In their new book Wild Justice: The Moral Lives of Animals, the authors argue that
anthropomorphism is alive and well, as it should be. Here they describe some activities
of animals, particularly animals at play, as clear signs that they have recognizable
emotions and moral intelligence. Based on years of behavioral and cognitive research,
the authors discuss in their book that animals exhibit a broad repertoire of moral
behaviors, including empathy and cooperation, but here they concentrate on the
fairness and trust so essential to any kind of play, animal or human. They contend
that underneath this behavior lays a complex range of emotions, backed by a high
degree of intelligence and surprising behavioral flexibility. Animals, they find, are
incredibly adept social beings. They rely on rules of conduct in their play, just as do
humans, which in turn, helps prepare animals for dealing with the intricate social
networks that are essential to their survival. The authors conclude that there is no
moral gap between humans and other species. As the play of animals helps to make
clear, morality is an evolved trait humans unquestionably share with other social
mammals. |