Animal Culture & Knowledge: How Teaching Across Generations Transcends Evolution

Lectures: 24

Duration: 27 Hours, 27 Minutes

Animal Culture & Knowledge: How Teaching Across Generations Transcends Evolution is a 24‑lecture audio deep dive into the most subversive idea in biology: evolution isn’t just written in DNA, it’s cached in brains, landscapes, and traditions that animals teach each other.

Across 60–90 minute episodes, you’ll drop into chimpanzee nut‑cracking schools in West Africa, dolphin tool workshops in Shark Bay, whooping crane “flight school” behind ultralight aircraft, elephant migration maps, raven snowparks, kea prank labs, and baboon parliaments. You’ll hear how meerkats run formalized scorpion lessons, how sperm whales share dialects that define ocean‑wide clans, how crows refine regional tool designs, and how cod and cranes can lose their cultural knowledge even when their genes survive.

This isn’t nature as wallpaper. Every lecture works like a forensic case file: who first noticed the behavior, how the fieldwork was actually done (the tape recorders, GPS tags, hydrophones, and regrettable tents), which hypotheses died, and which brutal little graphs finally proved “yes, this is culture.” We’ll dissect cognition and neurobiology in plain language, follow the energy budgets and payoffs, and watch traditions spread, mutate, or collapse under hunting, climate, and human noise.

The course keeps one foot in hard numbers—timings, GPS tracks, acoustic signatures—and the other in story: characters, conflict, and the occasionally deranged problem‑solving of both animals and humans. By the end, “animal culture” stops being a fuzzy metaphor and starts to look like what it is: a second inheritance system riding on top of genes, with traditions that can grow, fracture, or vanish.

No PhD in biology is required for this entry of Unteachable Courses—just curiosity, a tolerance for data, and an interest in the very strange fact that evolution did not keep the monopoly on learning.

Syllabus:

Lecture 1. Tai Forest Chimpanzees (Cote d’Ivoire) – The Long Apprenticeship of Nut-Cracking 

Lecture 2. Shark Bay Dolphins (Western Australia) – Spongers and Shellers 

Lecture 3. New Caledonian Crows (Grande Terre) – Schools of Tool Design 

Lecture 4. Southern Resident Orcas (Salish Sea) – Dialects as Identity 

Lecture 5. Eastern Caribbean Sperm Whales (EC1 Clan) – The Code of Codas 

Lecture 6. White-Crowned Sparrows (San Francisco Bay) – Neighborhood Accents 

Lecture 7. Koshima Macaques (Japan) – The Birth of a Tradition 

Lecture 8. Mahale Chimpanzees (Tanzania) – The Hand-Clasp Ritual 

Lecture 9. Kalahari Meerkats (Botswana) – Teaching the Scorpion Lesson 

Lecture 10. Whooping Cranes (Midwestern Reintroduction) – Learning to Migrate 

Lecture 11. Okavango Elephants (Botswana) – Matriarchs’ Maps 

Lecture 12. Atlantic Cod (Icelandic & Norwegian Stocks) – The Vanishing Routes 

Lecture 13. Vogelkop Bowerbirds (Arfak Mountains) – Valley Schools of Architecture

Lecture 14. Palm Cockatoos (Cape York) – Drummers with Signatures 

Lecture 15. Ngogo Chimpanzees (Uganda) – Tactics of Numbers 

Lecture 16. Red Sea Groupers & Giant Morays (Egypt) – Gestures Across Species 

Lecture 17. Okavango African Wild Dogs (Botswana) – Consensus and the Chase 

Lecture 18. Keas (New Zealand Alps) – The Contagion of Play 

Lecture 19. Ravens (Arctic & Scandinavia) – Games of Air and Ice 

Lecture 20. Amboseli Elephants (Kenya) – Rituals of Remembering 

Lecture 21. Mediterranean Bottlenose Dolphins (Sardinia) – Attending the Dead 

Lecture 22. Kibale Chimpanzees (Uganda) – Forest Pharmacology 

Lecture 23. Tsavo East Elephants (Kenya) – Inducing Birth 

Lecture 24. Savannah Baboons (Kenya) – Politics in Practice 

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