Ape Language Timeline

The history of ape language studies represents the work of brilliant scientists collaborating with amazing primates in pursuit of some insights that might help us better understand what makes us human. Over all these years, from Yerkes to Rumbaugh and Gua to Kanzi, there has been a common thread running through this timeline — a desire to learn and understand more about these amazing beings so much like us.

1700s - 1800s, Richard Lynch Garner

1700s - 1800s

1703:

French Philosopher, Julien Offray de la Mettrie, is born. He argues that there is no absolute sharp difference between man and animals and further, it is not impossible that an orangutan could speak.

1886:

Richard Lynch Garner publishes Gorillas and Chimpanzees which is a record of his studies of primates.

1891:

C. Lloyd Morgan publishes Animal Life and Intelligence. He states that animal intellectual abilities should always be explained as simplistically as possible and without reference to higher intellectual thinking. In animal language research, this canon is used not only as a sound precaution against exaggerated conclusions but also as argument for a reductionistic explanation of animal abilities.

1892:

Garner publishes The Speech of Monkeys and afterwards goes to Africa to study primates. He is convinced that monkeys communicate through vocalizations and his field trip is one of the first studies of free ranging primates.

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