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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Pioneer of Cognitive Ethology
Donald Griffen was the first scientist to challenge the reductionist notion that animals are incapable of cognition (the word for thinking in non-human animals), in 1985, and thus he founded the science of cognitive ethology.

This book, and the earlier version released in 1994, provide a range of reports of eye-witness accounts of behaviour by animals that...
Published 21 months ago by Ila France Porcher

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18 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best -- not the greatest
Griffin spends a lot of time arguing his stance and not enough discussing the definitions and concepts that his stance is based on. He does explain the research in nice detail but I kept thinking that learning theory explains the same behaviors he is describing without reference to conscious awareness and so the arguments don't fully make it for me. Minds of Their Own by...
Published on January 9, 2002 by James J. O'Heare


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Pioneer of Cognitive Ethology, April 24, 2010
Donald Griffen was the first scientist to challenge the reductionist notion that animals are incapable of cognition (the word for thinking in non-human animals), in 1985, and thus he founded the science of cognitive ethology.

This book, and the earlier version released in 1994, provide a range of reports of eye-witness accounts of behaviour by animals that could not have been performed without mental referencing (or thought), along with his brilliant analyses and discussion of the meaning of each.

Though well received by the public, the works of Professor Griffin were widely criticized by the scientific community because his assertions were difficult to prove, and because his views represented a reversal of the currently held belief that animals were unconscious automatons. However, more and more evidence is appearing in the scientific literature in support of his pioneering work, and proving him to be right.

This book is unequalled in presenting a scientific argument that animals, invertebrates as well as the so-called "higher" animals, are capable, each in a unique way, of cognition. The latest version of the work includes arguments in response to criticisms of the original.
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18 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best -- not the greatest, January 9, 2002
Griffin spends a lot of time arguing his stance and not enough discussing the definitions and concepts that his stance is based on. He does explain the research in nice detail but I kept thinking that learning theory explains the same behaviors he is describing without reference to conscious awareness and so the arguments don't fully make it for me. Minds of Their Own by Rogers is better but I still found this book (Animal Minds) better than Species of Mind which was way to hard to read -- I came away with no knew knowledge from reading Species of Mind. To sum I'd say it's worth reading for sure but only if you intend to also read Mind's of Their Own. They compliment each other nicely because Griffin describes more detail in the research while Rogers discusses the arguements and definitions better.

James O'Heare, Dip.C.B.

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0 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars building on quicksand, August 25, 2011
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Louis Berger (exBSO@yahoo.com Forsyth, GA, USA) - See all my reviews
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There are two huge problems with this book. First, it is based on a large constellation of unexamined presuppositions -- ones that even though they are widely held, nevertheless are suspect. The most fundamental unexamined, tacit assumptions are those concerning language, seeing and treating it as a separate referential semiotic system or tool. A close second set is composed of assumptions about possible explanations -- basically, that explanations must be in terms of articulable/cognitive text or model. The third set of questionable presuppositions concerns what I have called "the pure knowledge paradigm", the search for truth, certainty, for its own sake that thinkers such as Richard Rorty have come to view with suspicion if not disdain. So, the book's effort has no rationale other than the pursuit of academic, abstract truth. Here, the neglected question is, why are we investigating this issue? Our goals ought to dictate what approaches are appropriate.

All in all, the enterprise is a misleading waste of time, masquerading as a scientifically respectable, laudable project.
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3 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazon Sells FUR!!!, August 27, 2009
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Amazon Sells Fur (Amazon sells fur!) - See all my reviews
I liked the book, but am saddened that I bought it from a company that SELLS FUR. I am sick and sad that I ever gave Amazon a single dime. I am not the only one. Amazon execs should understand that there are many more people out here who are offended at the butchering deaths of helpless animals for ridiculous VANITY, than there are people who would actually go to amazon to buy their FUR COATS. I ask that others please reconsider buying any more products from these people until they stop selling fur, and stop sending out cookie-cutter form letters to those of us who give a damn about the lives of others. (No, it is not enough to claim that they're merely trying to "give the customer what they want even if it offends some people. Would they say that if I wanted to buy heroin? If I wanted to buy a nuclear weapon? If I wanted to buy an Indonesian House Boy??? Not good enough. Some things are so reprehensible that society demands that they NOT sell them. Although, I'm sure that if they could, they would, so long as it was profitable.)

Take the profit out of death and join me in boycotting Amazon.

Try Powells(dot)com instead.
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10 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A DOG CHASING ITS OWN TAIL, December 5, 2002
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Griffin's hair turned white pursuing answers in this field. He lists 800 books in his 45 page Bibliography! It is a real test of the reader's vocabulary: perceptual consciousness, reflective consciousness, epiphenomenon, cognitive ethology and on and on and on.

A class in semantics may have clarified the author's thoughts. Everything he talks about, e.g., whether animals and computers can think, is based on his or others verbal definitions without much evidence to verify these beliefs. It is obvious that every creature has its own view of the world. And equally obvious that there is no way to compare the worldview of a bee or ant to a human worldview because of greatly differing boundary conditions. I doubt that a long recitation of ones ignorance will prove useful in the grand scheme of life. And one simply can't define oneself up to a higher state of knowledge. This writing reminds me of a dog chasing its own tail.

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8 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Do NOT Read This Book, December 4, 2001
Do not read this book. I attempted to read this book for a college class. This book should be cut down to the size of a magazine article and be published in a scientific journal. The public should not be misled into thinking that this book is readable. It is written at too high of a diction, and Griffin rambles on for 20 pages on one topic, which I won't spoil for those of you unfortunate to read this trash. The subject information is interesting, but this is written poorly, and will bore the reader to tears. Just thought I'd let you all know.
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Animal Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness
Animal Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness by Donald R. Griffin (Paperback - November 30, 2004)
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