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What Feral Children and Clever Animals Tell Us
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Abstract
Each Of Our minds knows it is alone in a universe it creates; yet in our attempts to communicate, among ourselves and other species, we reveal a struggle to know other minds, to overcome the isolation of our own mind. This book is a chronicle of some attempts to grasp the workings of other minds. If the concept of death and the ability to make tools are not what distinguishes human beings from other beings, perhaps what does is the quest to understand the minds of others. It is a human belief that, through language, we can both transfer the contents of our mind to another and come to experience the contents of the minds of others. The exan1ples reported in this book are among the more elaborate attempts to do so. Each attempt is prompted by a wish common to all of us, by our everyday concern to discover what goes on in the mind of another. The question is not whether we communicate. Of course, we do: your signs and gestures tell me much about your feelings, emotions, and intentions. But they do not tell me as much as I would like to know, so I find myself constantly searching for ways to discover the nature of your intentions and your meanings. I guess these only through my own private world, as has been documented by the accounts contained in this book. I can understand your mind only through the filters of my mind, for my mind is both the coder and decoder of your communications.
Title: What Feral Children and Clever Animals Tell Us
Description:
Abstract
Each Of Our minds knows it is alone in a universe it creates; yet in our attempts to communicate, among ourselves and other species, we reveal a struggle to know other minds, to overcome the isolation of our own mind.
This book is a chronicle of some attempts to grasp the workings of other minds.
If the concept of death and the ability to make tools are not what distinguishes human beings from other beings, perhaps what does is the quest to understand the minds of others.
It is a human belief that, through language, we can both transfer the contents of our mind to another and come to experience the contents of the minds of others.
The exan1ples reported in this book are among the more elaborate attempts to do so.
Each attempt is prompted by a wish common to all of us, by our everyday concern to discover what goes on in the mind of another.
The question is not whether we communicate.
Of course, we do: your signs and gestures tell me much about your feelings, emotions, and intentions.
But they do not tell me as much as I would like to know, so I find myself constantly searching for ways to discover the nature of your intentions and your meanings.
I guess these only through my own private world, as has been documented by the accounts contained in this book.
I can understand your mind only through the filters of my mind, for my mind is both the coder and decoder of your communications.
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