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Thinking with animals
2001
Sign Systems Studies
A central claim of biosemiotics is the ascription of semiotic competence to nonhumans. For strange historical reasons, this claim has been quite controversial in much of standard biological discourse. An analysis of ethnographic material from Greenland demonstrates that people regard animals as nonhuman "persons". i.e., as sensing and thinking beings. Like humans. animals are supposed to have knowledge about their environment. Taking this semiotic competence as a fact beyond any doubt enables
doi:10.12697/sss.2001.29.1.13
fatcat:7atyns4zczg7xkuoph3vhnghgm