Citation
Brown, Culum (2016) Comparative evolutionary approach to pain perception in fishes. Animal Sentience 3(5)
Commentary Type
Invited Commentary
Thread
Brian Key, Why fish do not feel pain
Abstract
Arguments against the fact that fish feel pain repeatedly appear even in the face of growing evidence that they do. The standards used to judge pain perception keep moving as the hurdles are repeatedly cleared by novel research findings. There is undoubtedly a vested commercial interest in proving that fish do not feel pain, so the topic has a half-life well past its due date. Key (2016) reiterates previous perspectives on this topic characterised by a black-or-white view that is based on the proposed role of the human cortex in pain perception. I argue that this is incongruent with our understanding of evolutionary processes.
DOI
10.51291/2377-7478.1029
Included in
Behavioral Neurobiology Commons, Behavior and Ethology Commons, Evolution Commons, Zoology Commons