Quote:
Can't speak for other people. But the reason I think that it is sensible to suppose that they get bored is that, to quote you, Experience teaches me they do
They act in ways directly analogous to bored people, and I am willing to believe it is *possible* they may share somewhat similar internal experiences to people (not the same, but in some ways similar), so for the same reason that I can look at my kid and infer that he's bored, I look at my chickens sometimes and infer that *they* are bored.
It's not EXPERIENCE at all, David -- it's INTERPRETATION. Which is another thing altogether. Two people can see the same behavior and interpret it different ways. You are *interpreting* them as not being bored; I'm interpreting them as
being bored.
There is never going to be any possible way to know for sure, and in any case it largely comes down to the semantic minutiae of what you mean by the word bored <shrug>
I presume we would both agree that when chickens are put in a situation where they don't have many options of what to do, they often end up doing things that we don't want them to do and that are not healthy for them. Like picking out each others' (or their own) feathers, or worse.
So, call it bored, call it a mechanical response according to mysterious instinctual programming, call it whatever else you want, that's fine.But that's what people are *talking about* when they talk about bored chickens.
(Actually, having written the above, I think probably know another real common reason for people to refer to chickens as being bored... because it is
convenient verbal shorthand. The same way you'd tell the mechanic that your car "doesn't want to start" or the garden "looks sad". It gets the point across. It is not necessarily meant to be a 100% literally accurate description of things that can be proven without a doubt to be precisely true.)
JMHO,
Pat