One would draw with his finger a circle, the other would draw another circle
alongside the first. This is enough to establish that they can understand one
another. If a thick stone
wall were to separate people, again it would not deter
them. One would knock three times; the other would also knock three times
in reply - communication is established. The idea of communication with the
inhabitants of another planet is based precisely on the system of light signals.
On the earth it is proposed to make an enormous luminous circle or square. It
should be noticed on Mars or somewhere over there and should be answered
by a similar signal. With animals we live side by side, yet we are unable to
establish such communication with them.
Evidently, the distance between us
is greater, the difference deeper than between
people
separated by ignorance
of language, stone walls and enormous distances.
Another proof of the absence of concepts in an animal is its incapacity of
using a lever, i.e. its incapacity of arriving independently at an understanding
of the significance and the action of a lever. The usual argument that an
animal does not know how to use a lever simply
because its organs - paws,
etc. - are not adapted for such actions, does not bear criticism, because any
animal can be
taught
to use a lever. This means that organs have nothing to
do with it. The thing is simply that
by itself
an animal cannot arrive at the
idea of a lever.
The invention of a lever at once separated primitive man from the animals
and it was inseparably connected with the appearance of concepts. The
mental side
of understanding the action of a lever
lies in the construction of a
correct syllogism. Without mentally constructing a syllogism it is impossible
to understand the action of a lever. Without concepts it is impossible to
construct a syllogism. In the mental sphere a syllogism is literally the same
thing as a lever in the physical sphere.
The application of a lever distinguishes man from the animal as drastically
as does speech. If some Martian scientists were to look at the earth and study
it objectively through a
telescope, not hearing speech from afar nor entering
into the subjective world of the inhabitants of the earth and without any
contact with it, they would divide the beings living on the earth into two
categories: those familiar with the action of a lever and those unfamiliar with
it.
On the whole the psychology of animals is very obscure to us. The infinite
number of observations made of
all animals, from elephants to spiders, and
the infinite number of anecdotes about the intelligence, perspicacity and
moral qualities of animals change nothing in
this respect. We represent animals either as living automatons or as stupid human
beings.
We are too shut up in the circle of
our own
mentality. We have no
idea of any other
mentality and involuntarily we think that the only kind of mentality possible is the one
we possess. But this is an illusion which prevents us from understanding life. If we
were able to enter into the inner world of an animal and understand
how
it perceives,
understands and acts, we would see many extremely interesting things. For example, if
we could represent to ourselves and re-create mentally the
logic
of the animal, it would
greatly help us to understand our own logic and the laws of our thinking. Above all we
would understand the conditional and relative character of our whole idea of the world.
An animal must have a very peculiar logic. Of course, it would not
be logic in the
true sense of the word, for logic presupposes the existence of
logos,
i.e. word or
concept.
Our usual logic, the one we live by, without which 'the cobbler will not be able to
make shoes' can be brought down to the simple scheme formulated by Aristotle in
those writings which were published by his pupils under the general title
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