Animals, both domestic and wild, often delight people with their ingenuity and ability to adapt to their environment. However, they do not think like people at all. The work of the brain of animals is arranged in a slightly different way.
Instructions
Step 1
The unusually intelligent eyes of some animals, their desire for survival and other abilities are just conditioned reflexes. Although, unlike congenital chewing, swallowing, defensive, sexual reflexes, conditioned ones mean much more for the development of the mind than it seems.
Step 2
Thanks to conditioned reflexes, animals learn to learn about the world around them. On the one hand, they bring their actions to automatism, in contrast to a person who is able to do the same thing in different ways, but on the other hand, this perfectly develops the logic of animals.
Step 3
Experts have long found out that higher animals - birds and animals - are able to solve various logical problems by trial and error. At the same time, they are able to form connections not just between vital and random signals, but also two or more insignificant stimuli. Due to these "indiscriminate" connections and associations, the animal brain gains additional important benefits. Animals and birds are able to learn various patterns of life and, as a result, accumulate knowledge about the habitat in which they live. Thanks to associations, they have a certain picture of the world.
Step 4
It is known that animals are capable of mastering new skills and abilities. Moreover, they not only remember them well, but also pass them on to other relatives, as well as from generation to generation. Imitation is another trait that makes animals adapt to any environment. They imitate everything that surrounds them, and relatives quickly adopt certain abilities from each other, as well as from other species.
Step 5
Animals are distinguished by excellent memory, and their brains never store useless information, sending one or another signal to the cells of the body at the right time. All this leads to new leaps in the evolution of species and changes in the surrounding world.