Sensitizing humans to fish sentience
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Can fish suffer ? : perspectives on sentience , pain , fear and stress
In contrast to other major forms of livestock agriculture, there is a paucity of scientific information on the welfare of fish raised under intensive aquacultural conditions. This reflects an adherence to the belief that these animals have not evolved the salient biological characteristics that are hypothesised to permit sentience. In this review, we evaluate the scientific evidence for the exi...
متن کاملAnimal Sentience 2016.X: Commentary on Key on Fish Pain
Certain cortical regions are necessary for pain in humans in the sense that, at particular times, they play a direct role in pain. However, it is not true that they are necessary in the more important sense that pain is never possible in humans without them. There are additional details from human lesion studies concerning functional plasticity that undermine Key’s interpretation. Moreover, no ...
متن کاملAnimal Sentience 2016.X: Commentary on Key on Fish Pain
Some contemporary scientists are using comparative neurobiological data to argue that non-mammalian vertebrates have feelings, most notably of pain (e.g., Braithwaite, 2010; Mashour and Alkire, 2012), while Key (2016) uses the same general data to reach the opposite conclusion. In a nutshell, he argues that fish cannot feel pain because fish don’t have a neocortex, which humans need to consciou...
متن کاملAnimal Sentience 2016.X: Commentary on Key on Fish Pain
The question of whether fish can experience pain or any other feelings can only be resolved by neurobiologically targeted experiments. This commentary summarizes why this is essential for resolving scientific debates about consciousness in other animals, and offers specific experiments that need to be done: (i) those that evaluate the rewarding and punishing effects of specific brain regions an...
متن کاملAnimal Sentience 2016.X: Commentary on Key on Fish Pain
Do fish consciously feel pain? Addressing this question, Key (2016) asks whether the neural mechanisms underlying conscious pain reports in humans can be identified in fish. This strategy fails in three ways. First, non-mammalian consciousness — if it exists — may depend on different mechanisms. Second, accumulating neurophysiological and behavioural evidence, evolutionary considerations, and e...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Animal Sentience
سال: 2017
ISSN: 2377-7478
DOI: 10.51291/2377-7478.1197