Dr. Cliff Redford
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But what is beautiful about this story is Punch has gained confidence and has learned how to work within the social hierarchy.
He is now being seen standing up for himself and screaming at the monkeys that have been bullying him.
And he's actually made not fake friends, but real friends now within the group.
So it's this beautiful viral story.
But what I found fascinating is this sort of proves, I mean, we already knew it was true, but this showcases a theory of attachment, it's called, back that was created or back that was discovered in 1950s.
So back in the 1950s, animal behaviorists, and humans are considered animals as well,
believed in what they called the behaviorist theory, that we become attached to a parenting figure, one that gives us the necessities of life.
For me, it's my therapist.
Well, their theory prior to the 1950s was it was whoever gave you food, shelter, water, nutrients.
But what this study actually proved was that monkeys, therefore probably people, are more attached with those that give us the emotional requirements, the cuddling, the love, the support.
This study is a little barbaric.
We don't treat monkeys this way anymore.
But what they did was they took a group of rhesus monkeys and they took them away from their mothers when they were quite young.
They stuck them in a confined space all by themselves.
And in the confined space, there were two monkeys.
air quote mothers.
There was the wire mother and the soft mother.
The wire mother was literally the shape of a monkey made out of chicken wire and it had these tubes that provided food and water.
So the monkeys could go up to this wire mother and get fed and get
and get nutrients.