For that matter, do any animals other than humans get nostalgic?

  • Shadow@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    I don’t think we have any way to know.

    My dog definitely remembers and gets excited about places when going back after years. Does he think about those places otherwise? Probably not

    • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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      6 days ago

      I had a dog named Ellie. She had this little whimper moan thing she would do when she wanted something, and you had to go through the The List™ to determine what it was.

      “Is her hungry?”

      “Does her want a to-to” (toy)

      Et cetera.

      She wouldn’t stop her whimper until you said the right item.

      One time I had exhausted The List™ and was just trying random things because the whimpering was getting a little old at this point and I was desperate. So I asked “do you wanna go see the kitty balls?”

      The kitty balls we a collection of stray cats at a Walmart we lived near nearly a decade prior. She had not been to see the kitty balls in at least 8 years.

      She lost her fucking mind. Jumping up and down (not an easy task on an old girl with messed up legs from getting hit by a car), barking, spinning around. I loaded her up in the car and drove two hours so she could stare out the window at stray cats in the back corner of a Walmart parking lot.

      I miss her a lot. And apparently, she missed the kitty balls

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    I’m not even aware of a scientific definition of nostalgia, or any way to verify detect its presence. Which means that afaik, there’s no way to know what they do and don’t experience in that regard.

    However, I’ve been around a lot of dogs over the years. One of the things that’s pretty consistent is that, while their memory is better than they get credit for, they don’t seem to have emotional responses to memory when it isn’t trauma related.

    In other words, they don’t exhibit behaviors to indicate that they’re thinking about the past when engaging with something in the present. They seem to live in the present until and unless something happens that sets off a fear response related to past events.

    That being said, I have also had a dog react strongly when the name of another animal was used in their presence, when that other animal was no longer in their life. The dog in specific that I saw this in would spend time after hearing the name looking for the missing animal, and eventually settle down extra close to people and exhibit behaviors that mimic sadness behaviors when humans do them. But it never insured lasted for long, and anything positive at all would break them out of it immediately.

    That isn’t the same as nostalgia. I’m using it as an example of why I don’t think they experience nostalgia. But it also points to them having a much deeper set of memories than we usually think of them as having.

    • inv3r5ion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      For what it’s worth my dog got loose once and walked himself through the forest to the dog park on his own like we would do together. So he must of been thinking about past fun with other dogs and wanted more with or without me.

  • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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    6 days ago

    Nostalgia is entirely a subjective experience. Even if your dog would tell you that it does you’d still have to take their word for it.

  • oo1@kbin.earth
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    5 days ago

    People speculate that animals like elephants mourn their dead. I don’t really know how they prove it though.

    Mourning seems related to nostalgia.