Humanish by Justin Gregg review – how much of a person is your pet?

The Guardian 1 min read 19 hours ago

<p>From prosthetic testicles for dogs to sociable reptiles, a behavioural scientist explains what we get wrong – and right – about animal minds</p><p>In the 1970s a former Soviet naval officer named Igor Charkovsky popularised a concept which came to be known as dolphin-assisted birth. Likely inspired by New Age theories, he urged expectant mothers to dip in the ice-cold water of the Black Sea, commune with dolphins, and give birth underwater. In the “very near future,” he claimed, “a newborn child would be able to live in the ocean with a pod of dolphins and feed on dolphin milk”.</p><p>The oddest thing about Charkovsky was not so much his theory, but its remarkable resilience within both Soviet and western culture, as Justin Gregg sets out in his illuminating and&nbsp;lively new book. Gregg’s work is both a&nbsp;dissection and an ode to the irresistible allure of anthropomorphism, our&nbsp;tendency to apply human characteristics to non-humans, whether animals, objects, AI, or God. An expert on animal cognition who also teaches improv, Gregg deftly guides us through our alternately charming, destructive and wrong-headed fantasies about everything from marine mammals to our iPhones.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/oct/15/humanish-by-justin-gregg-review-how-much-of-a-person-is-your-pet">Continue reading...</a>
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