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‘Game-Changer’: The fascinating and wide-ranging creative lives of animals

I have been hoping that people will respect and treat animals better for most of my life. That they might see animals as individual creative beings who contribute to their own lives, their families, groups, cultures, species.

MARC BEKOFF: Carol Gigliotti’s eye-opening book ‘The Creative Lives of Animals’… is a game-changer. She shows how important creativity — improvisation and invention — is in a wide variety of contexts, including expressing different emotions, playing, socially communicating with others, courting, mating, and raising children, and designing and engineering animals’ homes.

Science-based and easy to read, The Creative Lives of Animals will be of interest to a broad audience, including researchers and non-researchers alike, and surely will change how humans view and treat the fascinating animals with whom we share our magnificent planet. Here’s what Carol had to say about her landmark and highly original book…

Marc Bekoff: Why did you write The Creative Lives of Animals?

Carol Gigliotti: I was delighted to find an article and a book on animal innovation and creativity in the early 2000s. Here, I thought, were qualities, such as intelligence, emotion, or self-awareness, that humans could no longer assume did not exist in animals. However, two things within the research troubled me. One was the insistence on the word innovation instead of creativity.

As an artist and longtime teacher of creative processes, I experienced the difficulties caused when conflating those two concepts. A second issue for me was that the language used often limited the range of creativity documented and did not describe or recognize other qualities animals used in their creative processes…

MB: What are some of the topics you weave into your book, and what are some of your major messages?

CG: The foundational topic is how animals use their intelligence, experience, emotion, and agency to communicate, play, build, make tools, choose and obtain their sexual partners to flourish in their worlds, and contribute to their cultural inheritance.

These are topics of ongoing research by biologists, ethologists, evolutionary biologists, comparative psychologists, conservation biologists, and neuroscientists, among others. I take the reader through a journey of discovery about how species from elephants to alligators and octopuses to ants use their unique creative qualities to accomplish these objectives.

An important message I hope readers take from the book is that we, too, need to be open, flexible, and comfortable with complexity, qualities associated with creative behavior. We need to exercise these qualities if we are to appreciate animals for who they are as individuals and understand how creativity is often an integral part of their everyday lives. From this in-depth exploration into the creativity of animals, another message emerges.

Previous conservation efforts to preserve biodiversity have been considered in genetic terms. Little thought was given to the loss of individual animals and their creative contributions to the families, groups, cultures, and habitats in which they flourish. Disregarding individual animals’ creativity and its influence on the distinct cultures of animals across and within species as a significant driver of biodiversity offered limited successful conservation of both species and habitats, something desperately needed to fight climate change. Only recognizing this will open up new, creative paths to how we might stop the loss of biodiversity on our shared planet…

MB: Are you hopeful that as people learn more about creativity in a wide range of animals, they will respect and treat them better?

CG: I have been hoping that people will respect and treat animals better for most of my life. I am hoping, with this book, they might see animals as individual creative beings who contribute to their own lives, their families, groups, cultures, species, and the biodiversity essential to the health of this planet. SOURCE…

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