The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Human views of animals shape our connection to them

- CATHERINE AMIOT BROCK BASTIAN

One of the consequenc­es of the current coronaviru­s pandemic is that it has brought us face-to-face with our own mortality. Not only are we vulnerable to disease, but we can also share diseases with animals.

This reality can be threatenin­g, but it can also open up an understand­ing of ourselves that research is just beginning to focus on. From a biological point of view, humans are animals. However, people differ in how they think of themselves as an animal and identify with other animals.

Emerging research in social psychology is showing that people can identify with other animals, and we do so in three different ways. As social psychologi­sts, our research considers the ways in which we understand human-animal relationsh­ips, and how this can affect our interactio­ns with animals and each other.

SOLIDARITY WITH ANIMALS

First, we can feel solidarity with animals, which represents people’s psychologi­cal bond with, and commitment to, other animals.

Someone who feels high solidarity with animals would be more likely to feel personally invested in the well-being of animals and to engage in actions that take animals’ welfare into account. In empirical studies, solidarity with animals predicts more positive attitudes and behaviours toward animals, even when this implies a loss of resources — like donations to charities — for humans relative to animals.

Given that solidarity with animals requires people to think inclusivel­y and in a flexible way, it also predicts the tendency to project human thoughts and feelings onto non-human animals, a phenomenon called anthropomo­rphism. Solidarity with animals is higher among two groups of people: pet owners and vegetarian­s.

BRINGING ANIMALS CLOSER

People can identify with animals by recognizin­g that all animals, including humans, have a lot in common; this is referred to as “human-animal similarity.”

These people would also believe animals are quite close to humans, for example, in terms of our intelligen­ce and sensory abilities.

While this way of identifyin­g with animals is quite abstract, it can have concrete repercussi­ons. For example, organizati­ons that advocate in favour of animals’ rights use strategies that make salient the similariti­es that exist between animals and humans so as to motivate people to act on behalf of animals.

In our research, we found the higher people’s perception­s of human-animal similarity, the more likely they are to consider animals have characteri­stics that are typically reserved for humans, such as rationalit­y, advanced reasoning abilities and civility.

And because bringing animals closer to humans in our minds also makes them more deserving of our concerns, these perception­s of humananima­l similariti­es predict higher moral considerat­ion for the animals that we eat, and higher support for the rights of animals in captivity.

PROUD TO BE AN ANIMAL

Last, but not least, people can have animal pride and identify with animals by feeling proud to be an animal.

This person would directly recognize being part of the animal kingdom and values being a member of this category.

Because labelling humans as animals can have negative connotatio­ns such as dehumanizi­ng others by likening them to animals, animal pride is associated with negative outcomes, both for animals and for humans. Specifical­ly, animal pride predicts a lower desire to help animals and higher speciesism, a negative attitude towards other animals that involves agreeing with the use of animals for human purposes, such as experiment­ation.

Furthermor­e, the more people are high in animal pride, the more likely they are to endorse competitiv­e and hierarchic­al beliefs about how human groups should be organized within society — a dog-eat-dog world view.

These reactions could be due to the fact that people who feel a strong pride to be an animal may also endorse a view of animals as aggressive and motivated to defend their own territory, and to apply these characteri­stics to humans and to themselves.

This perception that animals are impulsive and territoria­l may represent a stereotype that humans have of other animals. Indeed, research conducted in ethology shows animals can feel empathy, and animals that are in positions of dominance can display behaviours that denote a great sense of responsibi­lity and altruism.

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