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第30章

essays on life, art and science-第30章

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it is one which in most cases we can neither speak nor understand?
How can we say that a sentinel rook; when it sees a man with a gun
and warns the other rooks by a concerted note which they all show
that they understand by immediately taking flight; should not be
credited both with reason and the germs of language?

After all; a professor; whether of philology; psychology; biology;
or any other ology; is hardly the kind of person to whom we should
appeal on such an elementary question as that of animal intelligence
and language。  We might as well ask a botanist to tell us whether
grass grows; or a meteorologist to tell us if it has left off
raining。  If it is necessary to appeal to any one; I should prefer
the opinion of an intelligent gamekeeper to that of any professor;
however learned。  The keepers; again; at the Zoological Gardens;
have exceptional opportunities for studying the minds of animals
modified; indeed; by captivity; but still minds of animals。  Grooms;
again; and dog…fanciers; are to the full as able to form an
intelligent opinion on the reason and language of animals as any
University Professor; and so are cats'…meat men。  I have repeatedly
asked gamekeepers and keepers at the Zoological Gardens whether
animals could reason and converse with one another; and have always
found myself regarded somewhat contemptuously for having even asked
the question。  I once said to a friend; in the hearing of a keeper
at the Zoological Gardens; that the penguin was very stupid。  The
man was furious; and jumped upon me at once。  〃He's not stupid at
all;〃 said he; 〃he's very intelligent。〃

Who has not seen a cat; when it wishes to go out; raise its fore
paws on to the handle of the door; or as near as it can get; and
look round; evidently asking some one to turn it for her?  Is it
reasonable to deny that a reasoning process is going on in the cat's
mind; whereby she connects her wish with the steps necessary for its
fulfilment; and also with certain invariable symbols which she knows
her master or mistress will interpret?  Once; in company with a
friend; I watched a cat playing with a house…fly in the window of a
ground…floor room。  We were in the street; while the cat was inside。
When we came up to the window she gave us one searching look; and;
having satisfied herself that we had nothing for her; went on with
her game。  She knew all about the glass in the window; and was sure
we could do nothing to molest her; so she treated us with absolute
contempt; never even looking at us again。

The game was this。  She was to catch the fly and roll it round and
round under her paw along the window…sill; but so gently as not to
injure it nor prevent it from being able to fly again when she had
done rolling it。  It was very early spring; and flies were scarce;
in fact there was not another in the whole window。  She knew that if
she crippled this one; it would not be able to amuse her further;
and that she would not readily get another instead; and she liked
the feel of it under her paw。  It was soft and living; and the
quivering of its wings tickled the ball of her foot in a manner that
she found particularly grateful; so she rolled it gently along the
whole length of the window…sill。  It then became the fly's turn。  He
was to get up and fly about in the window; so as to recover himself
a little; then she was to catch him again; and roll him softly all
along the window…sill; as she had done before。

It was plain that the cat knew the rules of her game perfectly well;
and enjoyed it keenly。  It was equally plain that the fly could not
make head or tail of what it was all about。  If it had been able to
do so it would have gone to play in the upper part of the window;
where the cat could not reach it。  Perhaps it was always hoping to
get through the glass; and escape that way; anyhow; it kept pretty
much to the same pane; no matter how often it was rolled。  At last;
however; the fly; for some reason or another; did not reappear on
the pane; and the cat began looking everywhere to find it。  Her
annoyance when she failed to do so was extreme。  It was not only
that she had lost her fly; but that she could not conceive how she
should have ever come to do so。  Presently she noted a small knot in
the woodwork of the sill; and it flashed upon her that she had
accidentally killed the fly; and that this was its dead body。  She
tried to move it gently with her paw; but it was no use; and for the
time she satisfied herself that the knot and the fly had nothing to
do with one another。  Every now and then; however; she returned to
it as though it were the only thing she could think of; and she
would try it again。  She seemed to say she was certain there had
been no knot there beforeshe must have seen it if there had been;
and yet; the fly could hardly have got jammed so firmly into the
wood。  She was puzzled and irritated beyond measure; and kept
looking in the same place again and again; just as we do when we
have mislaid something。  She was rapidly losing temper and dignity
when suddenly we saw the fly reappear from under the cat's stomach
and make for the window…pane; at the very moment when the cat
herself was exclaiming for the fiftieth time that she wondered where
that stupid fly ever could have got to。  No man who has been hunting
twenty minutes for his spectacles could be more delighted when he
suddenly finds them on his own forehead。  〃So that's where you
were;〃 we seemed to hear her say; as she proceeded to catch it; and
again began rolling it very softly without hurting it; under her
paw。  My friend and I both noticed that the cat; in spite of her
perplexity; never so much as hinted that we were the culprits。  The
question whether anything outside the window could do her good or
harm had long since been settled by her in the negative; and she was
not going to reopen it; she simply cut us dead; and though her
annoyance was so great that she was manifestly ready to lay the
blame on anybody or anything with or without reason; and though she
must have perfectly well known that we were watching the whole
affair with amusement; she never either asked us if we had happened
to see such a thing as a fly go down our way lately; or accused us
of having taken it from herboth of which ideas she would; I am
confident; have been very well able to convey to us if she had been
so minded。

Now what are thought and reason if the processes that were going
through this cat's mind were not both one and the other?  It would
be childish to suppose that the cat thought in words of its own; or
in anything like words。  Its thinking was probably conducted through
the instrumentality of a series of mental images。  We so habitually
think in words ourselves that we find it difficult to realise
thought without words at all; our difficulty; however; in imagining
the particular manner in which the cat thinks has nothing to do with
the matter。  We must answer the question whether she thinks or no;
not according to our own ease or difficulty in understanding the
particular manner of her thinking; but according as her action does
or does not appear to be of the same character as other action that
we commonly call thoughtful。  To say that the cat is not
intelligent; merely on the ground that we cannot ourselves fathom
her intelligencethis; as I have elsewhere said; is to make
intelligence mean the power of being understood; rather than the
power of understanding。  This nevertheless is what; for all our
boasted intelligence; we generally do。  The more we can understand
an animal's ways; the more intelligent we call it; and the less we
can understand these; the more stupid do we declare it to be。  As
for plantswhose punctuality and attention to all the details and
routine of their somewhat restricted lines of business is as obvious
as it is beyond all praisewe understand the working of their minds
so little that by common consent we declare them to have no
intelligence at all。

Before concluding I should wish to deal a little more fully with
Professor Max Muller's contention that there can be no reason
without language; and no language without reason。  Surely wh

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