Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Well, Gorrilla's have learned to communicate with sign language, [Pigeons] are also able to read and comprehend text. Parrots like the [African Grey] can also learn to read, do math, and speak, along with comprehend the language, much like numerous other
Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Well, Gorrilla's have learned to communicate with sign language, [Pigeons] are also able to read and comprehend text. Parrots like the [African Grey] can also learn to read, do math, and speak, along with comprehend the language, much like numerous other
Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
I'd be interested to find out if such a hybrid could understand human language and the animal language, and if so, if they could translate between the two.
URL: https://forum.audiogames.net/post/457208/#p457208
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Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Thats quite true, animals I think share quite a bit more cognitive ability and experience with us than most might admit. Birds for example have twice the neural density compared to mammals, Crows in particular have 2 different dialects with over 250 unique
Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Thats quite true, animals I think share quite a bit more cognitive ability and experience with us than most might admit. Birds for example have twice the neural density compared to mammals, Crows in particular have 2 different dialects with over 250 unique
Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Thats quite true, animals I think share quite a bit more cognitive ability and experience with us than most might admit. Birds for example have twice the neural density compared to mammals, Crows in particular have 2 different dialects with over 250 unique
Re: CRISPR: Human Animal Chimeras
Read about this, it raises a fascinating question: at which point would something be considered too human? I guess at this stage it's impossible to answer since we don't know how human neurons would interact with whatever other species' and how this would