TEXT E Lately social scientists
have begun to ask if culture is found just in humans, or if some animals have a
culture too. When we speak of culture, we mean a way of life a group of people
have in common. Culture includes the beliefs and attitudes we learn.
It is the patterns of behaviour that help people to live together. It is
also the patterns of behaviour that make one group of people different from
another group. Our culture Lets us make up for having lost our
strength, claws, long teeth, and other defenses. Instead, we use tools,
cooperate with one another, and communicate with language. But these aspects of
human behaviour, or "culture", can also be found in the lives of certain
animals. Animals Can Make Tools We used to think that the
ability to use tools was the dividing line between human beings and other
animals. Lately, however, we have found that this is not the case. Chimpanzees
can not only use tools but actually make tools themselves. This is a major step
up from simply picking up a handy object and using it. For example, chimps have
been seen stripping the leaves and twigs off a branch, then putting it into a
termite nest. When the termites bite at the stick, the chimp removes it and eats
them off the end--not unlike our use of a fork! Animals Can
Share Knowledge For some time we thought that although human
beings learned their culture, animals could not be taught such behaviour. Or
even if they could learn, they would not teach one another in the way people do.
This too has proven to be untrue. A group of Japanese monkeys was studied at the
Kyoto University Monkey Centre in Japan. They were given sweet potatoes by
scientists who wanted to attract them to the shore of an island. One day a young
female began to wash her sweet potato to get rid of the sand. This practice soon
spread throughout the group. It became learned behaviour, not from humans but
from other monkeys. Now almost all monkeys who have not come into contact with
this group do not. Thus we have a "cultural" difference among animals. Animals
Can Communicate With Language Even the use of language can no
longer separate human culture from animal culture. Attempts to teach apes to
speak have failed. However, this is because apes do not have the proper vocal
organs. But teaching them language has been very successful if we are willing to
accept other forms than just the spoken word. Two psychologists trained a
chimpanzee named Washoe to use Standard American Sign Language. This is the same
language used by deaf people. In this language, "talk" is made through gestures,
and not by spelling out words with individual letter. By the time she was five
years old, Washoe had a vocabulary of 130 signs. Also, she could put them
together in new ways that had not been taught her originally. This means she
could create language and not just mimic it. She creates her own sentences that
have real meaning. This has allowed two way talk. it permits more than one-way
command and response. Of course, there are limits to the
culture of animals. As far as we know, no ape has formed social institutions
such as religion, law, or economics. Also, some chimps may be able to learn sign
language; but this form of language is limited in its ability to communicate
abstract ideas. Yet with a spoken language we fan communicate our entire culture
to anyone else who knows that language. Perhaps the most important thing we have
learned from studies of other animals is that the line dividing us from them is
not as clear as we used to think. Which of the following is true of the culture of animals
A.Chimps are able to communicate abstract ideas. B.All monkeys can wash potatoes and get rid of the sand. C.Chimps can talk as humans do. D.Very few animal species are found to have cultures.