Court to Weight Chimp's Status

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Court to Weight Chimp's Status

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Matthew, a 26-year-old chimp, is headed to court in Europe as part of a human effort to classify him as a person.

Beyond the legal challenges, anthropologists say chimpanzees are not humans, though without a clear definition of what it means to be human, backing that claim up is a challenge perhaps fit for some great courtroom drama.

Animal rights activist and teacher Paula Stibbe, along with the Vienna-based Association Against Animal Factories, says she wants the chimpanzee, named Matthew Hiasl Pan, declared a person. That way, Stibbe says she can become the primate's legal guardian if the bankrupt animal sanctuary where Matthew lives closes. (Under Austrian law, only humans are entitled to have guardians.)

The appeal has been filed in the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. The case comes after Austria's Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling in January, which rejected a request to appoint the chimp with a legal guardian. The rulings did not address whether a chimpanzee could be declared a person.

"His life depends on this decision," Eberhart Theuer, the animal rights group's legal advisor, told the Evening Standard, a tabloid newspaper in London. "This case is about the fundamental question: Who is the bearer of human rights? Who is a person according to the European Human Rights Charter?"

For some scientists, the question of humanness is a tricky one, as no single characteristic separates humans from every other animal. And behaviors once thought exclusive to us, such as tool-making, exist in many non-human primates. Considered our closest living relatives, chimps behave a lot like us and even share about 96 percent of their DNA sequence with humans.

But the bottom line is, chimps are chimps, not humans, say anthropologists.

"Granted, chimpanzees show many similarities with us as humans," said John Mitani, a primate behavioral ecologist at the University of Michigan, "but they are nonetheless chimpanzees, not humans, and are obviously different as well."

One anthropologist says the chimp dilemma brings up an animal-rights issue.

"We don't have a real formal venue for chimpanzees that have outlived their usefulness to whatever humans sort of owned them," said Jonathan Marks of the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. "Obviously it's a situation that needs to be addressed, but it needs to be addressed in the realm of animal welfare. Confusing humans for chimps never did anybody any good."

But is Matthew really like you and me?

"Everybody who knows him personally will see him as a person," Stibbe told the Evening Standard.

About 6 million years ago, chimpanzees and human ancestors diverged. Chimps went their way, and we began to go ours.

The split led to various differences. For instance, chimps are covered in hair and we are much less so. A chimp's brain is about one-third the size of an average human brain. And we walk upright on two legs, while chimps typically walk on all fours.

"What seems to have happened initially is that our ancestors began walking most of the time upright on two legs," Marks said.

Along the way, our ancestors shed their thick coats of body hair, which allowed us to disperse body heat differently from chimps. Chimpanzees, like most mammals, pant to keep their bodies from heating up. Humans sweat. Apparently, Marks said, when our ancestors began speaking, their vocal tracts reorganized and that made it difficult to pant.

Teeth tell a tale, too. Along our evolutionary trek, human ancestors developed much smaller canine teeth, while chimps still sport the dagger-like teeth.

"Male chimpanzees have canine teeth much larger than female chimpanzees," Marks told LiveScience. "That difference doesn't exist in humans. We call our lawyers instead of bearing our canine teeth. And women can call their lawyers just as readily as men can."

Even still, activist Stibbe says the legal standing is the only way to ensure the chimp's survival.

"In his home in the African jungle, he would have been well able to look after himself without a guardian," Stibbe said. "But since he was abducted into an alien environment, traumatized and locked up in an enclosure, it did become necessary for me to act on his behalf to secure the donation money for him and to avoid his deportation."

Marks disputes Stibbe's statement, saying that in nature chimps do have guardians, or other chimps to watch their backs. "That's ridiculous. Chimpanzees are very social creatures," Marks said. "One of the other tragedies of this chimpanzee is it seems to have grown up largely in isolation from other chimpanzees."

If Matthew the chimp were declared a person, scientists foresee it would open a messy can of worms.

"In general, I don't think that it's a good idea to grant chimpanzees legal human rights," Mitani said. "Chimpanzees are well-known to kill each other. What would we do to perpetrators of those 'crimes?'"

And what about other animals, like dogs and dolphins: A chimp-is-a-person ruling could trigger similar court cases in support of non-human animals getting human status, said Brosnan and other anthropologists.

Yet the definition of what it means to be a person, to be human, is a work in progress.

"One of the hard things is there is no single characteristic that has been found that makes humans truly unique," said Sarah Brosnan of Georgia State University. Brosnan studies social behavior and cognition in non-human primates.

Making matters worse, chimps show a smorgasbord of behaviors once tagged to humans only, including altruism, tool-use, an ability to learn from their kin and deal-making behaviors.

Looking to genetics for an answer is also thorny. If you were to line up any string of nucleotides (structural units) from a chimp's DNA with the corresponding human strand, about 96 or 98 out of 100 of the nucleotides would match up.

"Nobody is going to look at a human genome and a chimp genome and mix them up," Brosnan said. "But human genomes are different from each other, so it depends on where you draw the line."


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Post by Kanastrous »

Weigh, that is.

If spelling ability is a criterion, Matthew would probably come out better than I would...
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Post by Ender »

Interesting, with implications for the future. I wonder how this will end up.
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Post by Kanastrous »

Perhaps a special category for some of the more highly-developed primates/great apes, granting them superior protections to other non-human animals.

It's tough to imagine that a chimpanzee will get recognized as human-before-the-law.
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Post by Oskuro »

The whole article reminds me of the Sci-fi cliche of sentient machines being granted (or not) human rights, best explored (in my opinion) in Asimov's "I Robot" series.

I guess recognition of human rights to a non-human being will always be a terrible can of worms, no matter if they are chimps, doplhins, mice, robots or aliens... Specially with the "mankind is the apex of creation" crowd.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

Surely a precedent has already been established in this direction, no:

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Post by Kanastrous »

Not just a precedent, but a president.
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Post by Mayabird »

I've often thought that a sliding scale of rights could be implemented based on peak intelligence capacity of a species. There's probably no magic point where sentience kicks in (heck, for all we know, we might not have hit 'full' sentience as some more advanced alien races see it...or our descendants may see it, assuming we don't kill ourselves off first), but some creatures definitely have more mental capacity and ability to learn than others.

There's pretty much no trait that humans have that isn't found to some degree in lots of other animals, many of them not even primates. We just have a whole heck of a lot more than them. Chimps, dolphins, gray parrots, and others can peak at certain tasks, after a lot of learning, at the capacity of about a six year old human, though four is more usual. It might be better to say that humans surpass all other animal intelligences starting around age 7. Perhaps they could be afforded similar kinds of rights as we would give a small child, such as being off-limits to human hunters (unless you want to turn that around and implement the Swift solution instead).

Eating great ape meat does seem borderline cannibalistic to me, for what it's worth.
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Post by Alyrium Denryle »

You know me... whenever I see Orca at marine parks attacking people I cheer for the slave revolt and get some popcorn. And dont neglect elephants in the list of things that should have rights.
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Post by 18-Till-I-Die »

I believe, and this is just me, if a creature shows both emotion and self-awareness it's enough of a "person" for me to respect it as such. Because lets be fair, there are humans with mental problems not as clever as some chimps or elephants. If "personhood" is some subjective quality purely decdied by what species you are then it's meaningless; if we can identify true intellect in a creature then we should call it a person then we should TREAT them like people, and not animals.
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Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Patrick Degan wrote:Surely a precedent has already been established in this direction, no:

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How dare you?! How dare you sully the good and noble chimpanzee by such a comparison!

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Post by FSTargetDrone »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:You know me... whenever I see Orca at marine parks attacking people I cheer for the slave revolt and get some popcorn. And dont neglect elephants in the list of things that should have rights.
Bleh. Nothing is more loathsome than seeing such animals made to perform for humans' amusement. Hell, I don't even like horse or dog racing, but that's another story.
18-Till-I-Die wrote:I believe, and this is just me, if a creature shows both emotion and self-awareness it's enough of a "person" for me to respect it as such. Because lets be fair, there are humans with mental problems not as clever as some chimps or elephants. If "personhood" is some subjective quality purely decdied by what species you are then it's meaningless; if we can identify true intellect in a creature then we should call it a person then we should TREAT them like people, and not animals.
Yeah, I don't think any attempt to classify this or other animals as "human" (if only subjectively) is ever going to work out. "Personhood" needs to be stressed as a condition of any kind of animal that can potentially achieve it (however this may be "tested" or determined), I agree with you there.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

FSTargetDrone wrote:Bleh. Nothing is more loathsome than seeing such animals made to perform for humans' amusement. Hell, I don't even like horse or dog racing, but that's another story.
It actually kind of depends. Some cetaceans (though granted many of them are dolphins, not orcas) really enjoy performing for humans and seem to think that being fed and pampers in exchange for tricks is a good deal. There is a hotel in the Caribbean that has three dolphins "on staff" and pays to have fresh fish flown from the north Atlantic on a daily basis because these dolphins started showing up and doing tricks for crowds.

Of course, there is also a ton of abuse in such things. I've known a bunch of dog walkers at the park who are part of the Greyhound Rescue League who buy Greyhounds from race tracks when they start to get old enough that they aren't champions anymore, because alot of owners kill them when that happens. The amount of abuse in dog racing is actually pretty staggering. That's where legislation would do alot of good.
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Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Bit of a difference between dolphins knowing a good deal when they see it, and they are free to go as they please, and being enslaved in a small tank, forced to perform coreographed tricks for food

Dolphins have been engaging in mutually beneficial partnerships with coastal peoples for a long time. They are also the sex-crazed thrill killers of the sea... and that is one thing. SeaWorld is another.

As for the Orca... how we capture them can only be described as a brutal murderous slaving run. I have a video here of such a capture, but I cant bring myself to post it, because the young orcas distress calls (read: screams, they are literally screams) bring tears to my eyes and I will not subject others to it...
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Post by muse »

Oh damnit, for second there I thought Bush was being impeached or in deep legal trouble.
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Post by The Yosemite Bear »

please stop comparing bush to apes. The Apes find it demeening, and insulting. Some Bonobos have suggested giving him some good anal sex to increase his intellegence by not doing so many stupid and destructive things by being a blue balled drunk.
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Post by Winston Blake »

I think they'd have a much greater chance of success at trying to establish a 'special protection' status for the great apes. I don't see any benefits to being classified as human that couldn't be achieved by granting unique protections or 'rights' as an animal. We do a similar thing with endangered species all the time.

If animal rights activists think great apes truly are justified in being called human, then proving the validity of a special animal status should be easy.
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Post by Molyneux »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote:Surely a precedent has already been established in this direction, no:
*snip image*
How dare you?! How dare you sully the good and noble chimpanzee by such a comparison!

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Post by K. A. Pital »

Seriously, I read the title as "Court to weigh on Chimp's status" and thought it's about Bush's impeachment or something :lol:
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Post by wautd »

Stas Bush wrote:Seriously, I read the title as "Court to weigh on Chimp's status" and thought it's about Bush's impeachment or something :lol:
Ditto :?
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