What it’s like to be a…
Pigeon
Most people will walk past these birds without a thought. But some of their abilities far outstrip our own, writes Cal Flyn
ILLUSTRATION BY KATE HAZEL
Can you enter the mind of another creature without getting hopelessly lost? After publishing my first metamorphising column, in which I attempted to imagine myself into the head of a bat, a reader aired doubts. Such mental somersaulting was all very well, he wrote, but it was a dead end: I was chasing what it would be like for me to be a bat, “not what it is like for a bat to be a bat.” The challenge is not for us to imagine what it’s like to learn echolocation, for example, but to imagine ourselves as having different forms of consciousness entirely. A more complicated proposition.