a part of their brain has extended out right adjacent to their limbic system. the system processes emotions. the safest inference would be these are animals that have highly elaborated emotional lives. it s becoming clear that dolphins and whales have a sense of self, a sense of social bonding that they ve taken to another level, much stronger and much more complex than in other mammals including humans. we look at mass strandings, the fact that they stand by each other. everything about them is social, everything. it s been suggested that their whole sense of self is distributed among the individuals in their group. five of them. these orca are going to attack this sea lion. they have been breaking the ice off and swimming around him.
that humans don t have. a part of their brain has extended out right adjacent to their limbic system. the system processes emotions. the safest inference would be these are animals that have highly elaborated emotional lives. it s becoming clear that dolphins and whales have a sense of self, a sense of social bonding that they ve taken to another level, much stronger and much more complex than in other mammals including humans. we look at mass strandings, the fact that they stand by each other. everything about them is social, everything. it s been suggested that their whole sense of self is distributed among the individuals in their group. five of them. these orca are going to attack this sea lion. they have been breaking the ice
a part of their brain has extended out right adjacent to their limbic system. the system processes emotions. the safest inference would be these are animals that have highly elaborated emotional lives. it s becoming clear that dolphins and whales have a sense of self, a sense of social bonding that they ve taken to another level, much stronger and much more complex than in other mammals including humans. we look at mass strandings, the fact that they stand by each other. everything about them is social, everything. it s been suggested that their whole sense of self is distributed among the individuals in their group. five of them. these orca are going to attack this sea lion. they have been breaking the ice off and swimming around him. oh, here they come two of them
each community has a completely different set of behaviors. each has a complete repertoire of vocalizations with no overlap. you can call them languages, the scientific community is reluctant to say any other animal other than humans uses languages, but there s every indication that they use languages. the orca brain just screams out intelligence, awareness. we took this tremendous brain and put it in a magnetic residence imaging scanner. what we found was just astounding. they ve got a part of the brain that humans don t have. a part of their brain has extended out right adjacent to their limbic system. the system processes emotions. the safest inference would be these are animals that have highly elaborated emotional lives. it s becoming clear that dolphins and whales have a sense of self, a sense of social bonding that they ve taken to another level, much stronger and much more complex than in other mammals including humans.
animal other than humans uses languages, but there s every indication that they use languages. the orca brain just screams out intelligence, awareness. we took this tremendous brain and put it in a magnetic residence imaging scanner. what we found was just astounding. they ve got a part of the brain that humans don t have. a part of their brain has extended out right adjacent to their limbic system. the system processes emotions. the safest inference would be these are animals that have highly elaborated emotional lives. it s becoming clear that dolphins and whales have a sense of self, a sense of social bonding that they ve taken to another level, much stronger and much more complex than in other mammals including humans. we look at mass strandings, the fact that they stand by each