Do Animals Like Dogs Experience Social Commitment Like Humans?

True cooperation may require more than smarts, setting humans apart from other animals. Though new research suggests chimps and dogs might have a sense of 'shared intentionality.'

By James Gaines
Nov 12, 2022 2:00 PM
Doggy stare
(Credit: Erik Lam/Shutterstock)

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When we take a walk through the park with a loved one, we’re not just two people who happen to be moving in the same direction. We’re experiencing what some researchers call a moment of “shared intentionality.” Our ability to do this may be what enabled humans to uniquely evolve into the intensely social creatures that we are.

But, let’s say you invited Fido along for that stroll of shared intentionality between two humans. Might your pet also be experiencing this same social phenomenon? Experts are trying to pin that down, in an effort to expand understanding of animal minds and our own.

As researchers have probed animal brains and behavior, they have realized that many non-human animals appear to dream, play, communicate with each other and may even possess a “theory of mind.” If the latter is true, it could mean they recognize other creatures as thinking beings. All of this can raise questions about what truly sets us humans apart. That’s where “shared intentionality” comes in.

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