Question:
Given that only humans laugh, laughing reveals in certain way what is to be human.How do you explain it ?
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
Given that only humans laugh, laughing reveals in certain way what is to be human.How do you explain it ?
Seven answers:
?
2016-12-18 10:46:18 UTC
i think of it appears like a double typical. I dont think of there must be a ban on adult adult males doing the "safer" roles. in spite of the undeniable fact that if case in point there are 2 positions obtainable to 2 human beings a male and a woman, like cook dinner or infantry male gets the area as a cook dinner, the girl misses out on an threat to paintings so that's unfair. I dont think of the girls no longer being allowed in wrestle roles is via them no longer being waiting to bodily do it. I propose incredibly, you think of females won't have the ability to do x volume of push united statesand do static line jumps? BS. From what i've got heard approximately SF the loopy psychological stuff they prepare you for is the no longer trouble-free stuff. females at the instant are allowed to paintings weapons for floor based air defence, yet of this is carrying around a 30kg gun plus a heavy backpack over many ks. only look on the stuff Ironwomen do in opposition. So i've got confidence it is no longer allowed by way of interplay of adult men and women working mutually, yet society does not opt for to work out females killed, commonplace adult adult males are regularly protective over females so it ought to impact their judgment in heated circumstances and to a lesser volume that's extra substantial to have extra females than adult adult males to substantiate survival of a species. If there are females that wont to do issues enable them to. in the event that they fail education they fail. only like some adult adult males fail while they attempt particular roles interior the defence stress.
student_of_life
2006-02-08 20:04:08 UTC
Actually chimps do express laughter and amusement. Other primates probably do as well, but I have not read about this. So I wouldn't say then that it expresses what it is to be human, but maybe what it is to be a primate species with consciousness. I couldn't offer any educated theory about why laughter and amusement occur.
belledejourdenoir
2006-02-08 14:41:27 UTC
That's not true. My pets laugh. It took me a while to figure it out. I always tickle my cats. They don't make an obvious chuckle but there is an obvious reaction. Dogs have more audible laughs than cats do. The only reason your pets may not laugh at your jokes is because you have not taught them the language spoken in your household.
2006-02-08 14:40:05 UTC
well, not only human laugh i.ve seen some monkey's smile and hi'enas (form lion king)
Sully
2006-02-08 14:35:23 UTC
Just another way we are lucky.
cyanne2ak
2006-02-08 14:35:19 UTC
Oh I am certain that animals laugh, even if it is not in the audible way that we humans do. My animals have obvious senses of humor! They also give me "the middle finger" on a regular basis as well. :)
2006-02-08 14:38:19 UTC
Dogs laugh too.



Don't look now, but is that dog laughing?

Susan Milius



Amid all the panting, a dog at play makes a distinctive, breathy exhalation that can trigger playfulness in other dogs, says a Nevada researcher. Yes, it might be the dog version of a laugh.





Dogs at play give breathy exhalation (top) that differs from standard pants (bottom, arrows).

Simonet





"To an untrained human ear, it sounds much like a pant, 'hhuh, hhuh,'" says Patricia Simonet of Sierra Nevada College in Lake Tahoe. However, this exhalation bursts into a broader range of frequencies than does regular dog panting, Simonet discovered when she and her students analyzed recordings.



They observed the bursts during play but not in aggressive clashes, Simonet reported in Corvallis, Ore., last week at a meeting of the Animal Behavior Society.



Gordon Burghardt of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, who theorizes about the evolution of play, says Simonet's presentation caught his interest. Her dog-laughing proposal needs more testing, he cautions. But he notes that other scientists have proposed that nonhuman primates and even rodents laugh.



Simonet's team investigated the question by standing in parks with a parabolic microphone that enables them to record dog hubbub from a distance. "People kept coming up to talk to us, so we finally had to wear signs explaining that we were trying to record," she says.



Simonet differentiates a broader-frequency exhalation from pants by calling it a laugh. With recordings of such laughs and growls, the researchers tested 15 mostly young dogs in an observation room. When the researchers broadcast the laugh, a puppy often picked up a toy or trotted toward a presumed playmate, if a person or another dog was in the room. Simonet's own best attempt at the laugh likewise prompted dogs to look for a romp. Broadcasting growls elicited no such effects.



This dog-exhalation study reopens many questions about whether animals laugh, comments Brian Knutson of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. He has recorded chirps that laboratory rats give as they wrestle with each other. Rats also chirp before receiving morphine or having sex. He interprets the sound as indicating "the rat expects something rewarding."



Such phenomena help neuroscientists trace the brain's reward circuitry, Knutson explains. He says he's unsure about how to compare the chirp of a romping rat to the guffaw of a person. "I think we've done a decent job of figuring out what it means in the rat," he says. "Now the onus is on the human researchers."



Another analyst of rat chirps, Jaak Panksepp of Bowling Green (Ohio) University, has recorded the animals' ultrasonic squeaks while he tickled them. "Of course, you have to know the rat," he cautions. He says he is open to the possibility that the rat chirps amount to laughter in the animal world. Also, he suggests that Simonet's team could search for animal laughter by recording the sound dogs make when they are tickled.



Yet another student of play, Marc Bekoff of the University of Colorado in Boulder, says he thinks he knows the panting sound Simonet describes. "When I get down on all fours and go up to dogs and go 'hhuhahhuhahhuh,' they get very solicitous," he says. "Whether it turns out to be like a laugh or not doesn't matter in the end, because what's important are all the questions it opens up about how communications work."


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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