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Katharine
Payne, a student of both music and biology during her undergraduate
years, combined those interests to discover and document the songs of
humpback whales. Since the late 1960s when this research began, these
'songs' have entered into the realm of common knowledge. This
familiarity and a rather egocentric tendency that homo sapiens
exhibit towards other species seems to have trivialized whale
communication.
Whales
have their own language. It is as simple as that. Humans are not
unique in their ability to communicate. In fact, an argument can be
made that human language, at best, is rather clumsy and inefficient.
If one considers end results, all of human history and the current
state of the planet provide all the facts anyone might need to make
such an argument. The good that has been accomplished by our species
seems to have been done by small groups of people working locally,
people who have overcome the language barrier.
What
evidence is there that whale sounds are no more than the equivalent
of our grunts and groans? A discovery by Dr Payne made in 1969 is one
piece of the puzzle. She found that whale songs change over time. As
winter approaches, all the 'singers' in a particular breeding ground
will start singing the previous winter's song. By the end of their
migration and the time spent at their feeding ground, these whales
will be singing a new song, a very different song. And all the
'singers' in the population will have learned the new song.
Obviously, something more complex than grunts and groans is going on
here.
Katy
Payne asserts that the humpbacks do more than just 'talk'; they are
using their language to compose and make their own brand of music.
The
salient fact about all communication within and between species
(except humans) is that of integration. Whales are one with their
environment, perfectly adapted to all contingencies of life at sea;
and the same might be said of aardvarks and zebras and everything in
between. And though some humans speak disparagingly of nature red in
tooth and claw, the relationships between species and with the
environment generally is symbiotic. Are there malicious beasts in the
jungle? Nasty brutes that prey on the weak simply from some perverse
enjoyment of inflicting pain and suffering?
Only
homo sapiens. Our language seems, by design, to confuse and confront,
to set us apart from one another and from the world around us.
Music,
however, does seem to be a different behavior all together. Perhaps
the whales are on to something. Perhaps what we all need to do is
talk a whole lot less and sing a whole lot more.
Recommended
reading:
on
the language of elephants
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