Persistent Affections: Episodic Memory and Animal Ethics

Main Article Content

Gabriel Corda
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6053-9695
Fernando Marte
https://orcid.org/0009-0005-7473-3375

Abstract

Based on a naturalistic philosophical methodology, this article proposes two features of episodic memory that are relevant for thinking about some issues in animal ethics: (1) the reconstructive character of affectively charged past events, and (2) the narrative character and autonoethical awareness of episodic memory. Regarding the first issue, we briefly review the current debate over evidence that some animals have internally triggered experiences of hedonic valence and suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. We then explore some of the implications of this trait for animal welfare in intensive production systems. Next, we review the debate on the second issue and demonstrate the role that the properties of episodic memory have played in the attribution of personhood in the philosophical tradition, along with more deflated conceptions of these capacities, understood as a psychological unity or continuity. The final section argues that these contemporary conceptions, which link certain features of memory to psychological unity, allow for the attribution of personhood to nonhuman animals.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Corda, G., & Marte, F. (2024). Persistent Affections: Episodic Memory and Animal Ethics. Astrolabio, (33), 134–158. https://doi.org/10.55441/1668.7515.n33.42258
Section
Dossiert

References

AALTOLA, E. (2008). “Personhood and animals”. Environmental Ethics, 30-2, 175-193.

AGUILERA DREYSE, B. (2019). Estatus moral y concepto de persona. En B. Aguilera Dreyse, J. A. Lecaros Urzúa y E. Valdés (eds.), Ética animal: fundamentos empíricos, teóricos y dimensión práctica, pp. 111-128. Madrid: Universidad Pontificia Comillas.

ANDREWS, K. (2020). The animal mind: An introduction to the philosophy of animal cognition. New York: Routledge.

ALLEN, P. A.; KAUT, K. P.; y LORD, R. R. (2008). “Emotion and episodic memory”. Handbook of Behavioral Neuroscience, 18, 115-132.

BARRETT, L. F. (2017). How emotions are made: The secret life of the brain. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

BOURNE, C.; MACKAY, C.; y HOLMES, E. A. (2013). “The neural basis of flashback formation: the impact of viewing trauma”. Psychological Medicine, 43, 1.521-1.532.

BOYLE, A. (2019). “Learning from the past: Epistemic generativity and the function of episodic memory”. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 26-5/6, 242-251.

BOYLE, A. (2022). Episodic memory in animals: Optimism, kind scepticism and pluralism. En A. Sant'Anna, C. Jude McCarroll & K. Michaelian (eds.), Current Controversies in Philosophy of Memory, pp. 189-205. New York: Routledge.

BRACKE, M. B. M.; SPRUIJT, B. M.; METZ, J. H. M.; y SCHOUTEN, W. G. P. (2002). “Decision support system for overall welfare assessment in pregnant sows A: Model structure and weighting procedure”. Journal of Animal Science, 80-7, 1.819-1.834.

BREWIN, C. R. (2015). “Re-experiencing traumatic events in PTSD: New avenues in research on intrusive memories and flashbacks”. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 6-1, 1-5.

CARNAHAN, D. (2019). Complex Post-traumatic stress disorder in Thai Elephants: Prevalence and Management Implications. Somerville, MA: Tufts University.

CLAYTON, N. S.; BUSSEY, T. J.; y DICKINSON, A. (2003). “Can animals recall the past and plan for the future?”. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 4-8, 685-691.

CLAYTON, N. S. y DICKINSON, A. (1998). “Episodic-like memory during cache recovery by scrub jays”. Nature, 395-6.699, 272-274.

CLAYTON, N. S.; YU, K. S.; y DICKINSON, A. (2001). “Scrub jays (Aphelocoma coerulescens) form integrated memories of the multiple features of caching episodes”. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 27-1, 17-29.

CLAYTON, N. S.; YU, K. S.; y DICKINSON, A. (2003). “Interacting Cache memories: evidence for flexible memory use by Western Scrub-Jays (Aphelocoma californica)”. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 29-1, 14-22.

CRUSE, S. D. (2014). “Military working dogs: classification and treatment in the US Armed Forces”. Animal Law, 21, 249-284.

CRYSTAL, J. (2022). Episodic Memory in Animals. En M. Krause, K. Hollis & M. Papini (eds.), Evolution of Learning and Memory Mechanisms, pp. 302-316. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

CRYSTAL, J. D.; ALFORD, W. T.; ZHOU, W.; y HOHMANN, A. G. (2013). “Source memory in the rat”. Current Biology, 23-5, 387-391.

DELON, N. (2015). Against moral intrinsicalism. En Animal Etics and Philosophy: Questioning the orthodoxy, pp. 31-45. London: Rowman and Littlefield International.

DEGRAZIA, D. (2017). Meat eating. En S. Armstrong & R. Botzler (eds.), The animal ethics reader, pp. 275-280. New York: Routledge.

DOLAN, R. J.; LANE, R.; CHUA, P.; y FLETCHER, P. (2000). “Dissociable temporal lobe activations during emotional episodic memory retrieval”. Neuroimage, 11-3, 203-209.

EACOTT, M. J.; EASTON, A.; y ZINKIVSKAY, A. (2005). “Recollection in an episodic-like memory task in the rat”. Learning and Memory, 12-3, 221-223.

EACOTT, M. J. y NORMAN, G. (2004). “Integrated memory for object, place, and context in rats: a possible model of episodic-like memory?”. The Journal of Neuroscience, 24-8, 1.948-1.953.

EICHENBAUM, H. y FORTIN, N. J. (2005). “Bridging the gap between brain and behavior: cognitive and neural mechanisms of episodic memory”. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 84-3, 619-629.

HAMANN, S. (2012). “Mapping discrete and dimensional emotions onto the brain: controversies and consensus”. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 16-9, 458-466.

HOERL, C. y MCCORMACK, T. (2019). “Thinking in and about time: A dual systems perspective on temporal cognition”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 42, 1-78.

HUTH, M. (2020). “How to recognize animals’ vulnerability: Questioning the orthodoxies of moral individualism and relationalism in animal ethics”. Animals, 10-2, 1-15.

IFFLAND, B. y NEUNER, F. (2016). Trauma and memory. En G. Fink (ed.), Stress: Concepts, cognition, emotion, and behavior, pp. 161-167. Cambridge, MA: Academic Press.

KEVEN, N. (2016). “Events, narratives and memory”. Synthese, 193-8, 2.497-2.517.

KEVEN, N. (2022). What does it take to remember episodically? En A. Sant'Anna, C. Jude McCarroll & K. Michaelian (eds.), Current controversies in philosophy of memory, pp. 206-222. New York: Routledge.

KORSGAARD, C. M. (2018). Fellow creatures: Our obligations to the other animals. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

LAWRENCE, A. B.; VIGORS, B.; y SANDØE, P. (2019). “What is so positive about positive animal welfare? —A critical review of the literature”. Animals, 9-10, 1-19.

LINDQUIST, K. A.; WAGER, T. D.; KOBER, H.; BLISS-MOREAU, E.; y BARRETT, L. F. (2012). “The brain basis of emotion: a meta-analytic review”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 35-3, 121-143.

LOCKE, J. (1980). Ensayo sobre el entendimiento humano. Madrid: Editorial Nacional. (Edición original, 1690.)

LOPRESTI-GOODMAN, S. M.; BEZNER, J.; y RITTER, C. (2015). “Psychological distress in chimpanzees rescued from laboratories”. Journal of Trauma & Dissociation, 16-4, 349-366.

MAHR, J. B. y CSIBRA, G. (2018). “Why do we remember? The communicative function of episodic memory”. Behavioral and brain sciences, 41, 1-63.

MAHR, J. B. y FISCHER, B. (2023). “Internally triggered experiences of hedonic valence in nonhuman animals: Cognitive and welfare considerations”. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 18-3, 688-701.

MCMAHAN, J. (2005). “Our fellow creatures”. The Journal of Ethics, 9, 353-380.

MCMILLAN, F. D.; DUFFY, D. L.; ZAWISTOWSKI, S. L.; y SERPELL, J. A. (2015). “Behavioral and psychological characteristics of canine victims of abuse”. Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science, 18-1, 92-111.

MICHAELIAN, K. (2016). Mental time travel: Episodic memory and our knowledge of the personal past. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

MONSÓ, S. y GRIMM, H. (2019). “An alternative to the orthodoxy in animal ethics? Limits and merits of the Wittgensteinian critique of moral individualism”. Animals, 9-12, 1-17.

PANOZ-BROWN, D.; IYER, V.; CAREY, L. M.; SLUKA, C. M.; RAJIC, G.; KESTENMAN, J.; GENTRY, M.; BROTHERIDGE, S.; SOMEKH, I.; CORBIN, H. E.; TUCKER, K. G.; ALMEIDA, B.; HEX, S. B.; GARCIA, K. D.; HOHMANN, A. G.; y CRYSTAL, J. D. (2018). “Replay of episodic memories in the rat”. Current Biology, 28-10, 1.628-1.634.

PAPINEAU, D. (2023). Naturalism. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2023 Edition), Edward N. Zalta & Uri Nodelman (eds.), sin paginación.

PESSOA, L. (2008). “On the relationship between emotion and cognition”. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 9-2, 148-158.

RACHELS, J. (1990). Created from animals: The moral implications of Darwinism. New York: Oxford University Press.

ROWLANDS, M. (2016). “Are animals persons?” Animal Sentience, 10-1, 1-18.

ROWLANDS, M. (2019). Can animals be moral? New York: Oxford University Press.

SCHECHTMAN, M. (1996). The Constitution of Selves. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University.

SINGER, R. A. y ZENTALL, T. R. (2007). “Pigeons learn to answer the question «where did you just peck?» and can report peck location when unexpectedly asked”. Learning & Behavior, 35-3, 184-189.

SUDDENDORF, T. y CORBALLIS, M. C. (2007). “The evolution of foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans?”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30-3, 299-313.

SURACI, J. P.; CLINCHY, M.; ZANETTE, L. Y.; WILMERS, C. C.; y GRETHER, G. (2019). “Fear of humans as apex predators has landscape‐scale impacts from mountain lions to mice”. Ecology Letters, 22, 1.578-1.586.

TAYLOR, H. (2021). “Whales, fish and Alaskan bears: Interest-relative taxonomy and kind pluralism in biology”. Synthese, 198-4, 3.369-3.387.

TRAKAS, M. (2021). “Dimensiones de análisis de los recuerdos personales como recuerdos afectivos”. Revista de Psicología – tercera época, 20-1, 256-284.

TULVING, E. (1985). “Memory and consciousness”. Canadian Psychology, 26,1-12.

TULVING, E. (2005). Episodic Memory and Autonoesis: Uniquely Human? En H. S. Terrace y J. Metcalfe (eds.), The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Reflective Consciousness, pp. 3-56. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

VARNER, G. E. (2012). Personhood, ethics, and animal cognition: Situating animals in Hare's two level utilitarianism. New York: Oxford University Press.

YEATES, J. W. y MAIN, D. C. (2008). “Assessment of positive welfare: A review”. The Veterinary Journal, 175-3, 293-300.

YONELINAS, A. P. y RITCHEY, M. (2015). “The slow forgetting of emotional episodic memories: an emotional binding account”. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 19-5, 259-267.

ZANETTE, L. Y.; HOBBS, E. C.; WITTERICK, L. E.; MACDOUGALL-SHACKLETON, S. A.; y CLINCHY, M. (2019). “Predator-induced fear causes PTSD-like changes in the brains and behaviour of wild animals”. Scientific Reports, 9-1, 1-10.