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Rational Animals$
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Susan Hurley and Matthew Nudds

Print publication date: 2006

Print ISBN-13: 9780198528272

Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2012

DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198528272.001.0001

ContentsFRONT MATTER

Rational or associative? Imitation in Japanese quail

Chapter:
(p. 187 ) Chapter 8 Rational or associative? Imitation in Japanese quail
Source:
Rational Animals?
Author(s):

David Papineau

Cecilia Heyes

Publisher:
Oxford University Press
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198528272.003.0008

This chapter examines the heuristic and theoretical importance of a distinction between rational and associative behaviour in animals in the case of imitation in the Japanese quail. It suggests that there is no Rubicon between associative and rational processes to be crossed and that evolution adds specific new cognitive capacities by tinkering with previous mechanisms. It proposes that research should refocus on specific explanations of how animals do specific things, rather than on the presence or absence of some general or ideal form of rationality that contrasts with associative mechanisms.

Keywords:   rational behaviour, associative behaviour, Japanese quail, rational processes, evolution, imitation, rationality, cognitive capacities

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