A Blooming and Buzzing Confusion: Buffon, Reimarus, and Kant on Animal Cognition

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 12-2018
Journal Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Volume | Issue number 72
Pages (from-to) 1-9
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract
Kant's views on animals have received much attention in recent years. According to some, Kant attributed the capacity for objective perceptual awareness to non-human animals, even though he denied that they have concepts. This position is difficult to square with a conceptualist reading of Kant, according to which objective perceptual awareness requires concepts. Others take Kant's views on animals to imply that the mental life of animals is a blooming, buzzing confusion. In this article I provide a historical reconstruction of Kant's views on animals, relating them to eighteenth-century debates on animal cognition. I reconstruct the views of Buffon and Reimarus and show that (i) both Buffon and Reimarus adopted a conceptualist position, according to which concepts structure the cognitive experience of adult humans, and (ii) that both described the mental life of animals as a blooming, buzzing confusion. Kant's position, I argue, is virtually identical to that of Reimarus. Hence Kant's views on animals support a conceptualist reading of Kant. The article further articulates the historical antecedents of the Kantian idea that concepts structure human cognitive experience and provides a novel account of how the ideas of similarity and difference were conceptualized in eighteenth-century debates on animal cognition.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsc.2018.10.002
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