Tiny Brains, Big Psychologies: How Ants Changed Our Understanding of the Mind

C. Sleigh
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Abstract

InMental Evolution in Animals(1883), George Romanes wrestled with the relationship between brain size and intelligence. He could not quite bring himself to say that a creature with a brain so tiny as the ant’s was truly complex in its psychology. However, Romanes was radically out of step with the psychological developments that were shortly to follow, starting in continental Europe and spreading to the US. Beginning with the Swiss psychiatrist Auguste Forel, theorists began to dissociate ants’ psychology from their (limited) physical brains. As in the nineteenth century, the family Formicidae continued to provide one of psychology’s greatest riddles, but ants’ minds now became dispersed across the colony, rather than residing in the individual brain. This paper explores how that physical unseating of the mind interplayed with human concerns of the twentieth century, and with the differing ontologies of human psychology associated with them.
小大脑,大心理学:蚂蚁如何改变我们对心灵的理解
在《动物的心理进化》(1883)一书中,乔治·罗曼斯对大脑大小和智力之间的关系进行了研究。他不太敢说,像蚂蚁这么小的大脑的生物在心理上真的很复杂。然而,罗马人与不久之后的心理发展完全脱节,这种发展始于欧洲大陆,并蔓延到美国。从瑞士精神病学家奥古斯特·弗雷尔开始,理论家们开始将蚂蚁的心理与它们(有限的)物理大脑分离开来。就像在19世纪一样,蚁科继续为心理学提供最大的谜团之一,但蚂蚁的思想现在分散在整个群体中,而不是驻留在个体的大脑中。这篇论文探讨了心灵的物理上的错位是如何与20世纪人类的关注相互作用的,以及与之相关的人类心理学的不同本体论。
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