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- #41
Anthropomorphising is usually frowned upon in scientific circles. Sometimes you just can't make sense of animal behavior without it. Often the basic drives are the same, its the complexity of behavior and the environment that is different.I'm wondering what difference the why makes. When you start to hypothesize why, it becomes very easy to anthropomorphaise. In dog behavior circles, which may or may not be relevant to this discussion, the behaviorists have stopped asking why, but focus on what the dog is doing. This is with intent on modifying the behavior, of course, but still, it really isn't possible to know why. Making a best guess, seems like narrowing the focus to what you think or want it to be, thus possibly missing or dismissing relevant info. Animals don't always do what would seem to be in their own best interest. Take deer freezing in the headlights, for example.
The 'why' bit.......true, I, we, will probably never come up with a definitive answer.
I got told off at school for asking why, then at university and then at work...I can't help asking.
