Don't only humans have the ability to pass on
cultural information from one generation to the next?
Even animals like rats can pass cultural information from one
generation to the next. We know this not because we were
necessarily trying to study rat intelligence, but because rats
have long been out smarting the humans who have been trying to
poison and kill them.
This is illustrated by the following experiment which was designed to study how to poison rats more successfully. A colony of rats in a controlled environment was fed two types of food. Let us call these food X and food Y. Initially, the rats ate both types of food in equal amounts. One day, food X was poisoned with lithium chloride. Although neither food was ever poisoned after this one day, no rat in the colony ever ate food X again. What is especially interesting about this, though, is that no rat in the colony ever ate food X again even many generations later.
This colony of rats effectively had a cultural taboo which it was passing down from one generation to the next. This taboo made this colony of rats culturally distinct from other rat colonies of the same species. Just as with human taboos, this taboo persisted long after the reason for the taboo no longer existed. But it still made sense for this taboo to be maintained. After all, would you want to be the first rat to try food X again to see if it was poisoned, after no one had been eating it for many generations?
There is considerable evidence of far more complex cultural traditions in animals, particularly with regards to tool use among primates. However, I wanted to use rats in my example to emphasize that it is not just primates which pass cultural traditions to future generations.
Follow up questions:
Isn't it insulting to compare human beings with animals?
Don't only human beings have a soul?
Don't only humans have the ability to use language and understand abstract concepts?
How do you know that other animals can feel pain?
Aren't only humans self aware?
What evidence is there that other animals can make moral decisions?
Don't only humans understand the concept of death?
Don't only humans have the ability to enter social contracts?
Don't only humans have the ability to use tools?
How can some animal rights activists believe that other animals are our equals?