Department of Philosophy, Purdue University, 100 N. University Street, West Lafayette, IN, 47905, USA.
Department of Philosophy, John Carroll University, 1 John Carroll Boulevard, University Heights, OH, 44118, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2024 Jun;99(3):1058-1074. doi: 10.1111/brv.13056. Epub 2024 Jan 24.
Social norms - rules governing which behaviours are deemed appropriate or inappropriate within a given community - are typically taken to be uniquely human. Recently, this position has been challenged by a number of philosophers, cognitive scientists, and ethologists, who have suggested that social norms may also be found in certain non-human animal communities. Such claims have elicited considerable scepticism from norm cognition researchers, who doubt that any non-human animals possess the psychological capacities necessary for normative cognition. However, there is little agreement among these researchers about what these psychological prerequisites are. This makes empirical study of animal social norms difficult, since it is not clear what we are looking for and thus what should count as behavioural evidence for the presence (or absence) of social norms in animals. To break this impasse, we offer an approach that moves beyond contested psychological criteria for social norms. This approach is inspired by the animal culture research program, which has made a similar shift away from heavily psychological definitions of 'culture' to become organised around a cluster of more empirically tractable concepts of culture. Here, we propose an analogous set of constructs built around the core notion of a normative regularity, which we define as a socially maintained pattern of behavioural conformity within a community. We suggest methods for studying potential normative regularities in wild and captive primates. We also discuss the broader scientific and philosophical implications of this research program with respect to questions of human uniqueness, animal welfare and conservation.
社会规范——在特定社区内被认为是适当或不适当的行为规则——通常被认为是人类特有的。最近,一些哲学家、认知科学家和行为生态学家对这种观点提出了挑战,他们认为社会规范也可能存在于某些非人类动物群体中。这些说法引起了规范认知研究人员的极大怀疑,他们怀疑任何非人类动物是否具有进行规范认知所需的心理能力。然而,这些研究人员对于这些心理前提条件是什么并没有达成共识。这使得对动物社会规范的实证研究变得困难,因为我们不清楚我们在寻找什么,因此什么应该算作动物社会规范存在(或不存在)的行为证据。为了打破这种僵局,我们提出了一种超越有争议的社会规范心理标准的方法。这种方法的灵感来自于动物文化研究计划,该计划已经从对“文化”的强烈心理定义中转移出来,围绕着一组更具可操作性的文化概念来组织。在这里,我们提出了一组类似的构建,围绕着规范性规则的核心概念构建,我们将规范性规则定义为社区内行为一致性的社会维持模式。我们建议了一些方法来研究野生和圈养灵长类动物中的潜在规范性规律。我们还讨论了这个研究计划对于人类独特性、动物福利和保护等问题的更广泛的科学和哲学意义。