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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
What Is It Like To Become A Bat? Heterogeneities In An Age Of Extinction, Stephanie Erev
What Is It Like To Become A Bat? Heterogeneities In An Age Of Extinction, Stephanie Erev
Political Science Faculty Publications and Presentations
In his celebrated 1974 essay “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?,” Thomas Nagel stages a human-bat encounter to illustrate and support his claim that “subjective experience” is irreducible to “objective fact”: because Nagel cannot experience the world as a bat does, he will never know what it is like to be one. In Nagel’s account, heterogeneity is figured negatively— as a failure or lack of resemblance—and functions to constrain his knowledge of bats. Today, as white-nose syndrome threatens bat populations across North America, might figuring heterogeneity positively, as a condition of creativity, open up new modes of receptivity …