Quote:
Originally Posted by katsucats
I felt like this was non-news when I read it. It shouldn't escape imagination that dry material rubbing against each other makes more noise than pliable, dampened material. Some of the reporting made it out like the plants were "consciously" emitting the noise, but that's not what the study suggested at all.
|
The way that I took it is that the study found a correlation between sound and whatever the plant was experiencing, thus opening the door to use sound the same way we use color, smell, movement (e.g. speed of growth) to try to understand what a plant is going through.
As far as information is transmitted and processed between two living beings that entails communication. However, that doesn’t imply the communication is intentional, nor that the beings are sentient.
I do find that orchids and their ability to use deception for pollination is extremely interesting. It can’t be fully intentional, otherwise they wouldn’t bloom for us where no pollinators can be found, but we don’t know how much information plants can process and make “intentional” or “conscious” decisions on, their intention or consciousness might not be related to “thought” but that doesn’t mean they’re simple automations.