Highlighting the parallels between humans and non-human animals (2) I wrote the following for "Unity in Diversity," the verse-narrative project headed by Dr. Rohini Ramanathan. Here is more information and context about the project.
Scientists take an evolutionary view of diversity – why do some areas have several waterfowl species? How does a sparrow identify its kin? What makes a species, a species? How do scientists recreate the history of life? How is information gathered from fossils? Eventually, the conversation comes to us humans or Homo Sapiens. Why are Homo Sapiens the only hominin (descended from the apes) species currently alive? Does the answer lie in the human brain and the folds of our prefrontal cortex? Is it our capacity to plan, prepare for the future, and think about thinking; is it our capacity to feel shame, compassion, and embarrassment that makes us human? And there is always the issue of intelligence. Scientists are obsessed with intelligence – how it is measured, how human intelligence compares to a chimp’s or a bonobo's, can humans make machines that are as intelligent as us. We scientists delight when we discover that crows can fashion tools and hold grudges, elephants grieve for their loved ones, octopuses can deceive and mimic others, and rats show altruism. Indeed, do animals around us have validity outside of what we ascribe to them? Fortunately, anyone who has had the privilege of a close relationship with an animal and has made the effort to listen knows the answer.
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Creatures on the move: my Puppy..As I said my final goodbye to my puppy (named Puppy!) in August 2024, I recognized with gratitude the profound ways in which he changed me. On our walks, as he’d sniff for minutes on end, I would observe the purple flowers with yellow centers and take in the light of the changing season reflected in the sky and the trees. A tripod, thanks to a gun injury – Pup’s ears would flop up and down as he bopped around. He knew not a day of sorrow, nor self-pity, although he had plenty of reason for both. Self-assured only as a Pup could be, he would charm friends and strangers alike. Neighbors would call him an angel, Cariñito, a soldier in his previous birth, a miracle. Some say he will always be with me, that he is part of me – I seek evidence for this and find none. I know that there will never be another Puppy; but if there was one miracle, maybe there will be another.
Highlighting the parallels between humans and non-human animals I was thrilled to be invited to contribute to "Unity in Diversity," the verse-narrative project headed by Dr. Rohini Ramanathan. Her description for this project is: "My security camera captured the raccoon's nocturnal activities, a source of joy until I realized that she and her two kits lived in my attic. Eventually, when I saw the three of them in the cage waiting to be transported to faraway woods, their new home, I was touched by the love, caring, and affection on display by the mother raccoon even in captivity, toward her kits, no different from a humans toward her children. This experience documented in multi-verse(about a dozen poems) in an e-Booklet will capture the reality of the oneness of all beings, the universal bond that exists--E pluribus unum, a necessary reminder in the fractured world that we live in. This thinking too contributed to my conceiving of this at project. In the public presentation segment, in advance short works on the "unity in diversity" theme will be solicited from other writers, the finalists sharing the stage with me. My reading will be accompanied by mood-setting piano and drum sounds."
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About SlokaMy name is Sloka. I am a neuroscientist and Bharatanatyam dancer; you can find more about me here. Archives
September 2024
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