They just say Nug and Fug over and over. Damn racist, homophobic whales. Or we decide they have rights... and we give them the right to vote... but they all just vote for Trump.... Someone's got to do something about these damn whales! Lol just kidding. Dems would "harvest" all those whale in ballots. 110% for Biden.
Like the gorilla who spoke sign language and told us to save the earth before it’s too late. And that nature and animals are all watching and waiting for us to help.
@@fewezt6012 A twenty minute limit on conversations with fish. The law was expanded to include whales back in 1874. The moral of the story? Never assume a RU-vid comment is factual.
It makes it easier because some whale species DO have SYNTAX. So if we use AI programs like chat gpt, it can help translate their calls. Many whale and dolphin species arent just your regular animal, they might have higher intelligence. @danzigvssartre
Just wait until the Japanese get ahold of this technology. It could make their hunts so much simpler if they could just say, "Come over her my child," in the voice of a whale's mother.
~ Agreed ~ The Taiji Dolphins slaughter and their so called biological Whale slaughter ~ They care nothing for the Oceans as they rape them every day of these beautiful Cetaceans ~ @@ElAteoMexicano Vegan for the Animals ~ mgfⓋ ~ #veganfortheanimals #stopeatinganimals #foodsgrownnotborn
Except we DO mean them harm. We hunted them to the edge of extinction and still do. We imprison them in theme parks. They accidentally get caught in our nets.
from what i know about whales is their personalities as individuals vary about as wide as humans, for inter species communication to work we need to “talk” to whales who are interested in communicating with us too.
Remarkable, 20 minutes of greeting one another. Maybe next time the NOAA… who is apparently the Arbiter of communicating with whales.. will let them greet each other for a little bit more reasonable timeframe of 30 minutes..
Researchers have 20-minute "talk" with whale in the wild 0308am 25.12.23 hear what they actually say, perhaps? i think our marine biologist has been at the funny fags (the mary anna) again... HAPPY XMAS.
I too converse with my cats in cat language. Animals are smart, and they have diverse personality too. Some of them are psycho but most of them are good.
@@Honey-Sanchez yes, animals actually understand human language if theyve been around long enough. Statement that says otherwise is pseudoscience. Even a brainless cell or virus that has no neurons are capable performing inteligent tasks. There are bunch videos of cats and dogs having conversations with their owners using talking buttons.
A 50-year-old film comes to mind called Close Encounters of the Third Kind. How come it took 50 more years to fathom? And they still have no idea what they're saying or what is being said. These ocean beings process thousands of bits of information per minute and we've known this for decades upon decades. Just like the killer whales. But then again we have no idea why they are crushing boats and upset. As far as AI and extraterrestrials, we are like tiny microbial Life playing in a sandbox without a clue of what is bigger than us.
Long ago I read a little known Arthur C. Clarke book "Dolphin Island." This type of communication ( with Dolphins) was a major part of the story. It was an early YA Sci-fi story that was really quite intriguing.
Actually, the more we discover things about them, the more we realise that we have many things in common. We are animals after all, mammals species are closely related. The worst bias was to think our spicie was above the others and so special.
I think its the way the information is presented here, specifically with the speaker bringing up ideas and wishes of conversations that are of course, very human. When they're actually studying and trying to apply the whale language, they most certainly understand our natural bias and work to exclude it.
Dude they weren't speaking English to them 😂 they have been observed communicating in their own way, and this was most likely a greeting. There is no "hi" because we made that word up dawg. However, the intention behind it is observed across the animal kingdom. Cats for example absolutely have a way of greeting each other, but as humans, we can sum that up to being akin to saying, "Hello." It's when I write that down and you read it however, that you may assume this to be a literal way to say hello, though it's not that simple. Think about it a little more broadly.
Researchers have 20-minute "talk" with whale in the wild 0306AM 25.12.23 sounded like a Stockhausen composition... i think the whale said: plums are dear!!! and can you get me some fries and a pizza whilst yer out?
Ok, don’t all animals communicate. 😑 you literally just copied a whale sound and of course the whale responds back with it. But, i feel like underwater creatures responds in frequency. That’s just my take… I’d experiment in that rather than replicating whale sounds for a response from them. That’s like me saying to my cat “meow” 100 times and the cat responds back by saying meow also.
Good point i think the progressive aspect of this communication is having an idea what each whale sound means in english. Its like learning a diff language & then speaking that to communicate with another person, they will answer back due to u speaking in a language THEY understand but the important fact is that you understand them BACK. Thats y its so innovative & fascinating. I dont think whales will ever speak a human language but if we can figure out how their sounds translate to one of ours it can bridge a communication gap.
No communication and language is different, dogs can’t tell another dog “there is a cat on the next block to the left” as they dont understand more than we do they have happy and aggressive noises but not like this, this whale is talking witch many scientists up until this study thought was just a human thing. Like they said “hey my name is”
@@proudlywild1491 Yes, other animals have sounds to communicate but not proper languages. There are four things that is required for a language to be language. There's a video on it and it's really interesting. I'll find it
really, no explanation on how it works? are they just playing whale noises and the whale is making noises back at them? do they have any way of understanding what they, or the whales, are saying? if so, how? if not, how is this a breakthrough, and how is it any different to me imitating the noises my dog makes? these are important details that just got brushed to the side as though we're supposed to just know.
here's what they did ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qqk8NZ_HYNw.html Basically just played a sound and the whale responded with the same sound. They think it's a way to greet each other as whales.
You may wish to get ahold of a copy of "Thousand Mile Song" and its CD of Humpback whale songs. It will blow your mind, or, at least, it has amazed me for many years, with and without MJ. Save the Whales!
Also, scientists and archeologists have absolutely overstepped their boundaries before just because they want to learn or get something so bad. It's a balance, and also the first amendment is a terrible argument here. These are other species entirely, with their own lives. We're in their territory now, and upmost caution should absolutely be used.
the way the US developed their tank's armor is by FIRST developing the armaments as priority. so they find all new ways of ground breaking method to make an armament more effective against armor, and then, they go to develop an armor that could handle that type of armament threat. after they managed to make the responding armor, they back developing the armament to DEFEAT that newly answer of armor. after they get the munition answer to solve that new armor, they go back to developing the ARMOR to be able to withstand that new advance munition, and repeat. if russia wonder why the US armors tech is so advanced compare to russian. they dont develop military techs based on BELIEFS. that method, worth copying. this is the same pattern for developing all their other military tech. they come up with ground breaking of something, and then go trying to find something to defeat that, after finding a way to defeat it, they improve more on the corresponding tech to respond to that solution, and so on.
So they played whale sounds and the whale made sounds back? I don’t know. Seems pretty expected. It probably thought it was another whale. Humans desperately need attention from anywhere it can get it.
Dawg just go look into the actual work being done behind the scenes. You're on a run of the mill news channel. Don't expect an actual breakdown of what's going on here. This is about an general and dumbed down as this information can get. Just saying before you comment some shid like this, go look into it more so you don't lead other people like you to start hating a project by making it look stupid. That's a net negative for everyone.
I'm guessing e doing that because whales and dolphins are very smart and we might start a war. That sounds a little wild but we don't truly know what theyre capable of
Because whales and dolphins been smart and Communicate with each other via frequencies our ape brains cant telepathically understand but I think a big reason is because these animals can spill the beans on Atlantis 🧜♀️
Sorry the difference is this whale is using complex grammar and meaning it’s not a sound it’s language, like English, like how you go to the vet and ur dog can’t tell you what’s wrong, this whale could say “my left flipper hurts at the tip, please be careful” this was a scientific breakthrough and paved miles for animal rights, proving that some highly intelligent animals like apes, citations and possibly corvids have a brain complex enough for such things
@AnTiThesis-HaT-HoT bruz they spoke whale what are you talking about?? Besides, what does a language from species to species have to do with anything???
Whales have alot to teach us.❤ Its high time we realize for all our technology we are perhaps not the wisest species. Smartest meh, wisest nope! But the whale!? What wisdom do they keep in their brains thrice the size of ours!!