Dogs can read minds, apparently

Dogs can read minds, apparently

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jimmy156

Original Poster:

3,711 posts

195 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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Saw this report on BBC breakfast, from a "prominent Cambridge scientist"

Surely its complete rubbish... does anyone know if there is any other evidence to support this, brain scans of dogs supposedly reading minds etc.

Must be a slow news day at the BBC as tey are reporting on an albino blackbird in their science/environment section rolleyes

Simpo Two

87,169 posts

273 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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jimmy156 said:
Must be a slow news day at the BBC as tey are reporting on an albino blackbird in their science/environment section rolleyes
I don't think journos can manage anything more scientific that that. They're still recovering from trying to say 'Pseudomonas' last week. Hell, I was playing with P. aeruginosa as a student!

Probably a seagull.

jimmy156

Original Poster:

3,711 posts

195 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I don't think journos can manage anything more scientific that that. They're still recovering from trying to say 'Pseudomonas' last week. Hell, I was playing with P. aeruginosa as a student!
I cant believe that they have only just appointed a science editor.

Simpo Two said:
Probably a seagull.
hehe and in other news the "rare white blackbird" seems to have grown, perhaps something to do with its albinism. It has been captured on film below:


IMG_4522 by jimmyb156, on Flickr

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

206 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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I didn't have to open that link to know that the prominent Cam scientist would be Sheldrake. If you liked that story OP, buy his book 7 experiments to change the world as it's an interesting read, whether you believe his theories or not.

Simpo Two

87,169 posts

273 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
quotequote all
jimmy156 said:
and in other news the "rare white blackbird" seems to have grown, perhaps something to do with its albinism. It has been captured on film below:

And from there it's one step to Global Warming. Congratulations, you just won your BBC Trainee Reporter Badge!

(ie from Any Subject to Global Warming in three moves or less)

R300will

3,799 posts

159 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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Sounds a bit far-fetched. I think there can be autistic types of dog but not psychic.

jimmy156

Original Poster:

3,711 posts

195 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
quotequote all
rhinochopig said:
I didn't have to open that link to know that the prominent Cam scientist would be Sheldrake. If you liked that story OP, buy his book 7 experiments to change the world as it's an interesting read, whether you believe his theories or not.
Is he respected in the scientific community or his he considered a bit of a loon?

jjones

4,438 posts

201 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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Read minds? They can't even look up!

Derek Smith

46,534 posts

256 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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Rhupert Sheldrake is not a Cambridge scientist. He was educated at Clare college.

In the first example quoted there is a massive leap of faith. The dog ran back to its home. At the same time his mistress was returning from holiday. Yet, according to the article, the dog 'knew' this.

Don't waste brain power on this one.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

206 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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Derek Smith said:
Rhupert Sheldrake is not a Cambridge scientist. He was educated at Clare college.

In the first example quoted there is a massive leap of faith. The dog ran back to its home. At the same time his mistress was returning from holiday. Yet, according to the article, the dog 'knew' this.

Don't waste brain power on this one.
Not strictly true. He WAS a fellow at Clare and headed up some dept. IIRC.

Jimmy - He is seen as a bit of a crack pot by much of the science community, BUT, I personally think the world of science does need a few like Sheldrake who are willing to look at some of the more fringe areas of science with a bit of scientific rigour. Occasionally a bit of left-field thinking does pay dividends.

The problem is there are too many who are willing to believe fringe science is true without ANY scientific rigour, so he is a bit of a hero to these types, which really doesn't help with his credibility; he ends being seen as king crackpot.

carmonk

7,910 posts

195 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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That's been going on 25+ years (the claims, not the mind-reading). Uncontrolled experiments with dubious results and even more dubious conclusions.

Halb

53,012 posts

191 months

Sunday 29th January 2012
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rhinochopig said:
Jimmy - He is seen as a bit of a crack pot by much of the science community, BUT, I personally think the world of science does need a few like Sheldrake who are willing to look at some of the more fringe areas of science with a bit of scientific rigour. Occasionally a bit of left-field thinking does pay dividends.

The problem is there are too many who are willing to believe fringe science is true without ANY scientific rigour, so he is a bit of a hero to these types, which really doesn't help with his credibility; he ends being seen as king crackpot.
I agree. Sometimes one gets the feeling that the science establishment crushes those who might be dabbling in what they consider heresy.
I had a really good book (that I now think is at my exes), can't even recall the title, but it was blue with black lined cover, and dealt with science through the ages, how politicians like to shape it for their ends, as well as the underhand dealings of scientists themselves whether ignoring data or subconsciously supporting their own theories.
Anyone help me?

edit
excellent, found it.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/CORRUPTED-SCIENCE-Ideology...
Still at exes thoughbiggrin

uktrailmonster

4,827 posts

208 months

Thursday 2nd February 2012
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rhinochopig said:
Not strictly true. He WAS a fellow at Clare and headed up some dept. IIRC.

Jimmy - He is seen as a bit of a crack pot by much of the science community, BUT, I personally think the world of science does need a few like Sheldrake who are willing to look at some of the more fringe areas of science with a bit of scientific rigour. Occasionally a bit of left-field thinking does pay dividends.

The problem is there are too many who are willing to believe fringe science is true without ANY scientific rigour, so he is a bit of a hero to these types, which really doesn't help with his credibility; he ends being seen as king crackpot.
That's a very measured viewpoint I have to say. My first reaction was horsest! But does Sheldrake actually employ scientific rigour or just manipulate experiments in favour of the results he would like to see? I'm not familiar with his work.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

206 months

Thursday 2nd February 2012
quotequote all
uktrailmonster said:
rhinochopig said:
Not strictly true. He WAS a fellow at Clare and headed up some dept. IIRC.

Jimmy - He is seen as a bit of a crack pot by much of the science community, BUT, I personally think the world of science does need a few like Sheldrake who are willing to look at some of the more fringe areas of science with a bit of scientific rigour. Occasionally a bit of left-field thinking does pay dividends.

The problem is there are too many who are willing to believe fringe science is true without ANY scientific rigour, so he is a bit of a hero to these types, which really doesn't help with his credibility; he ends being seen as king crackpot.
That's a very measured viewpoint I have to say. My first reaction was horsest! But does Sheldrake actually employ scientific rigour or just manipulate experiments in favour of the results he would like to see? I'm not familiar with his work.
Not sure I'm qualified to say TBH. It was years ago when I read "seven experiments..." - I was probably either doing A-Levels or first year undergrad. What struck me was not that he was saying what he proposed was necessarily true, just that what he'd observed from his initial experiments demanded a proper investigation.

It's certainly worth getting out from your local library to see for yourself. If the hypothesis of any of his experiments prove true, then they are certainly worth the small costs of doing the experiments.

Have a read for yourself http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/paper...