I am surprised that you don’t see the difference between accusing another poster of feeling personally threatened and an intellectual discussion of the methodology and validity of a published study
Don’t lie, especially not with a patronizing attitude. That really sets people off in my area of the world.
You and itinerant took a potshot at the researchers’ motivations, playing armchair psychologists, accusing them of a desire to project and anthropomorphize, implicitly accusing them of bias. It’s clear for all to see upthread. That was not an “intellectual discussion of the methodology and validity” and it is thoroughly intellectually dishonest of you to pretend so.
The question of how intelligence is defined is irrelevant. We are discussing the problems arising from a lack of definition of conceptualisation and abstraction in this study.
And what problems are those, precisely? The question of how intelligence is defined is
not irrelevant, it shows there are terms that one simply can’t provide a precise definition for. And yet, intelligence research goes on, and papers don’t provide a “precise” definition of intelligence. Are you suggesting all research into intelligence is worthless?
And, since you criticized the authors for not defining terms, you should be readily able to provide a possible definition of conceptualization or abstraction that doesn’t rely on **other **terms that can be measured and conceptualized in different ways, or a circular definition such as “conceptualization is the process by which concepts are formed”. Oh wait, you can’t. That is a problem in psychology in general and therefore it is unfair to critique this particular study for it.
Your point about accusing researchers of scientific misconduct is also irrelevant. No one is making that accusation. Questioning whether a task is representative of the area referred to is absolutely legitimate.
Talking about scientific misconduct is to show by analogy how vacuous an argument to ignorance is, you need actual evidence in support. No real “question” was raised about the representativeness of the task, only the
unsupported bare possibility that “maybe” the task wasn’t representative, which makes it a mere argument to ignorance. Additionally, it was tacitly insinuated the authors weren’t really seriously aware of the possibility of task non-representativeness, being led by a desire to anthropomorphize and project, whereas in fact they discussed it in a fair amount of depth in their discussion.
You still haven’t provided an argument as to why perceptual processing is a more parsimonious or reasonable explanation for the researchers’ findings as opposed to a rudimentary form of conceptual processing. Until you do, you haven’t really “questioned” whether the task was representative.
I’m very surprised that as a published author of neuroscience research you are unaware of this basic fact.
More patronizing intellectual dishonesty on your part

. I said this earlier:
They would be legitimate points, if a real argument were actually given, rather than simply a bare assertion. It is obscurantism, if no reason is given to think that the behavior actually was overinterpreted or that the tasks were not valid measures of abstraction or conceptualization; it’s an argument to ignorance.
So, obviously, I’m aware of the question.
To the extent that you’re taking a slap at neuroscience and neuroscientists in general rather than just me - why don’t you worry about the problems with your own discipline - they are far greater. It’s a veritable graveyard of failed hypotheses.
In addition, if you had read my last post you would notice that I quote the authors’ own, qualified conclusion!
You **selectively **quoted it. They do not conclude relational matching-to-sample is similarly performed by baboons and humans (they think the question is quite complicated for which the answer is not a simple yes-no), true, but they
also conclude that the transfer to novel stimuli supports the abstractness of the behavior in question without such qualification. And, you are a psychologist so you know this.
I do not make a prior asumption that animals do not have specific, limited cognitive abilities that are similar in some ways to our own. I have not seen any evidence that demonstrates that they have the same abilities.
Me neither. I’d like to see a humpback whale compose a symphony though.
TS presents this work as a plank in an argument that there is no difference between the abilities of non human and human animals in conceptualisation and abstraction, leading to the conclusion that the hypothesised human soul does not exist.
Don’t equivocate on “no difference”. Clearly there is a difference in **how well **non-human animals can conceptualize or abstract compared to humans. But there may not be a difference in the fact that there is **some **ability for conceptualization and abstraction in both non-human and human animals.
This conclusion doesn’t squash the idea of a human soul in itself. It does, however, bury the Thomist/Aristotelian concept.
*Rudimentary *abilities in non human animals- yes, we agree there.
So if you concede non-human animals have rudimentary abilities for abstraction and conceptualization, what exactly are you disagreeing with?
Are your published neuroscientific studies relevant to this area? Care to share any links?
I don’t do research in animals.