Social norms and the moral emotion of guilt are uniquely human phenomena, which are not observed in the animal kingdom. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ejsp.2015 …pic.twitter.com/qVWjW6fB45
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Social norms and the moral emotion of guilt are uniquely human phenomena, which are not observed in the animal kingdom. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ejsp.2015 …pic.twitter.com/qVWjW6fB45
There are 2 kinds of people: those who understand dogs and the damaged ones.
So all doggos are socialpaths?
Yes, apparently, but they do their best to make up for it.
They don't experience guilt while performing the act. Doesn't mean it's inaccurate to call it guilt after being caught. Many humans behave the same way, and we call that guilt.
(Exactly, author is engaging in a word game by impossible definition of guilt. all cooperating animals experience fear of imposition of costs, with submission response: guilt. )
When Axi would steal something from the living room, he would walk in a hilarious pronounced goose step to take it to his crate, demonstrating guilt. No owners visible to give cues; I could hear the difference in his gait from downstairs. Yeah, he knew he was violating a rule.
Uh humans aren't the only species with rules-based societies that punish transgressions.
In my reading of the literature, we are. Third party punishment of rule violations has not even been seen in the great apes.
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