{"title":"Hungry, Thinking with Animals","authors":"Dana Simmons","doi":"10.1086/709851","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Edward L. Thorndike (1874–1949), at the turn of the twentieth century, set up animal hunger as a model system for understanding human motivation and learning. Hungry animals participated in over a hundred years’ worth of experiments designed to characterize human emotions and behavior. Hunger, along with electric shocks, became standard tools for producing psychological effects, such as motivation, excitement, fear, learning. Scientists deprived kittens, monkeys, chicks, turtles, children, and soldiers of food for four, eight, twenty-four, or forty-eight hours to observe the variable effects. I want to think through the meaning and context of this choice. What is the nature of hunger as an epistemic tool and as a model system? Why did hunger appeal to Thorndike and his colleagues at the turn of the twentieth century as a reasonable and productive relation with their animal subjects? What preexisting relations made hunger an obvious choice? What relations, in the end, did hunger experiments produce? I am interested in how hunger, as a model system, helped to establish a field of behavioral-physiological-neuroscientific knowledge. I am even more interested in what the traces of these model systems, and the animals within them, can tell us about the history of hunger. In the global nineteenth century, hunger was a tool for social violence.","PeriodicalId":54659,"journal":{"name":"Osiris","volume":"35 1","pages":"268 - 290"},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1086/709851","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Osiris","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1086/709851","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Edward L. Thorndike (1874–1949), at the turn of the twentieth century, set up animal hunger as a model system for understanding human motivation and learning. Hungry animals participated in over a hundred years’ worth of experiments designed to characterize human emotions and behavior. Hunger, along with electric shocks, became standard tools for producing psychological effects, such as motivation, excitement, fear, learning. Scientists deprived kittens, monkeys, chicks, turtles, children, and soldiers of food for four, eight, twenty-four, or forty-eight hours to observe the variable effects. I want to think through the meaning and context of this choice. What is the nature of hunger as an epistemic tool and as a model system? Why did hunger appeal to Thorndike and his colleagues at the turn of the twentieth century as a reasonable and productive relation with their animal subjects? What preexisting relations made hunger an obvious choice? What relations, in the end, did hunger experiments produce? I am interested in how hunger, as a model system, helped to establish a field of behavioral-physiological-neuroscientific knowledge. I am even more interested in what the traces of these model systems, and the animals within them, can tell us about the history of hunger. In the global nineteenth century, hunger was a tool for social violence.
爱德华·桑代克(Edward L. Thorndike, 1874-1949)在二十世纪之交建立了动物饥饿作为理解人类动机和学习的模型系统。饥饿的动物参与了一百多年来的实验,这些实验旨在描述人类的情绪和行为。饥饿和电击一起,成为产生诸如动机、兴奋、恐惧和学习等心理效应的标准工具。科学家们在4小时、8小时、24小时或48小时内不给小猫、猴子、小鸡、海龟、儿童和士兵食物,以观察不同的效果。我想思考一下这个选择的意义和背景。作为一种认知工具和模型系统,饥饿的本质是什么?为什么桑代克和他的同事在20世纪之交将饥饿作为一种合理而富有成效的动物关系而吸引他们?是什么预先存在的关系使饥饿成为一个明显的选择?饥饿实验最终产生了怎样的关系?我感兴趣的是饥饿,作为一个模型系统,如何帮助建立一个行为-生理-神经科学知识领域。我更感兴趣的是,这些模型系统的痕迹,以及其中的动物,能告诉我们饥饿的历史。在19世纪,饥饿是社会暴力的工具。
期刊介绍:
Founded in 1936 by George Sarton, and relaunched by the History of Science Society in 1985, Osiris is an annual thematic journal that highlights research on significant themes in the history of science. Recent volumes have included Scientific Masculinities, History of Science and the Emotions, and Data Histories.