Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Depressed Dogs, Cats with OCD- What Animal Madness Means for Us Humans

The similarities and differences between animals and humans are vast, and we might never truly understand all that makes us and them unique. Just as we humans can feel complex emotions and experience certain things, it is safe to assume that animals do as well. In what ways it is hard to say but like Laurel Braitman said in the video, we will always be wondering about what non-human animals are feeling.

The similarities between animals and humans are that we both have the capacity to think and feel. We are both sentient beings, beings that can "feel." In class we learned that even a group of prestigious scientist signed "The Cambridge Declaration of Consciousness" which says that animals, like humans are conscious beings. In connection to this video, being aware that animals are sentient beings as well helps us understand that they are capable of so much that we can feel as well. Braitman stated that some would argue that it is anthropomorphizing animals, but she believes that we have to anthropomorphize them to a certain extent. We need to give animals certain human characteristics so that we may learn about more about them and know what is going on, especially if they are our pets. In the video we get certain examples of animals exhibiting strange behaviors, one could ignore them as just a habit but these are behaviors that go on for hours on end. Us as humans do things like pacing and self harm when something is wrong, so why should it imply anything else when it comes
to animals? If we know that they can feel pain, why would they repeat an action that harms them?

Often times we fail to notice something is wrong in ourselves but we will notice it in others. By us noticing certain traits of mental health issues in other humans we can help them seek help before it is too late. We can do the same for our fellow animal companions. Braitman explained that often times humans with mental health issues cannot explain how they feel; animals cannot explain how they feel either so that shouldn't stop us from seeking help for them. Just as we would help a human seek help because we care for them we should also seek help for animals as well.

Another similarity between humans and animals is our ability to form bonds with other species. Just as we form deep bonds with animals, they form bonds with us and with other animals as well. While we covered that it is impossible to truly know what animals are feeling we can compare a bit through our own feelings and what is going on inside our brains at those moments. We learned that we experience heightened levels of oxytocin when we are with our pets. Oxytocin is present often times between mothers and their babies; while having a baby to love is not the same as a pet, we definitely love them enough to experience these feelings of love and adoration for them. It is possible as many of us have experienced, to love another species and care for them as our own.

So then experiencing the closeness of animals to us goes to show that they must feel something towards us too. Their oxytocin levels rise as well and just the fact that they seek us out as well shows that there is something there. We won't know to what extent they feel it or if it is even similar to how we feel but just having them want to be there is enough to show we can form bonds. All the videos and pictures of animals getting along between species is also showing us that they enjoy each others company. They want to be close and they form those bonds even though it is thought they should not get along.
One major difference other than communication is that us as humans have domesticated animals and that has made them change so much over the generations. Domesticating animals must benefit us in some way but does it always benefit the animals? Would animals still experience all these problems with anxiety and depression in the wild? Would they be able to get over these problems with the help of their own species or is that just something that us humans are willing to do for them? We heard of various examples in the video but they were all brought on by humans. Giving pets medications, giving the rabbits to the monkey. By domesticating animals we made them more dependent on us, could they have developed certain traits, emotions, reactions just for us? Like the guilty dog look, in the video we saw in class dogs who hadn't done something wrong but were scolded gave their owners the guilty look. Although they hadn't eaten a treat without their owners permission they acted/looked guilty when scolded. We know animals have an impact on us and that we have to change to accommodate them as well so maybe animals do the same except in a more extreme way since we are domesticating them for traits that we want to see in them.

As mentioned in the video, for humans we have an atlas of all the accepted mental diseases in humans but for animals there isn't much research. Mostly the only thing we have for animals is YouTube videos. Braitman does bring up an excellent point that she in no way thinks that the mental issues animals have are the like the ones humans have but that doesn't mean they don't also have them. She explains how a dogs PTSD isn't the same as a humans but that it isn't the same for two humans either. There are different levels and extents to everything. Us humans might have the same emotions but we feel them differently. It can be the same for animals.

Animals are sentient beings just as we are, we know that much. Without further research we cannot fully understand to what extent we are a like but we know we show a lot of similarities to each other. Mental health issues as we saw in the video affect animals, it is a real thing and it can be treated like in humans as well. She brings up the point that just because we don't know what is going on in an animals mind, that shouldn't stop us from empathizing with them, "The best thing that we could do for our loved ones is, perhaps, to anthropomorphize them." Anthropomorphizing should not be viewed as a negative thing, well to some extent. If we instead showed anthropodenial, where would that lead us? It wouldn't bring us any closer to non-human animals if we thought they couldn't share anything like emotions with us. We can help animals with mental issues by anthropomorphizing them, by trying to understand them. We cannot do help them or each other if we do not stop and try to envision what could possibly be happening and why.


1 comment:

  1. Great discussion on the video and how our shared traits with animals is cause for our concern and our help for them. If we share these traits, their suffering with mental illness should matter as much as our own, and if we can alleviate it for certain animals we can help, then we probably should.

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