• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

What Aristotle Got Wrong About The Octopus

October 16, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

For evidence of evolution’s sheer barminess, look no further than the humble octopus. It’s boneless, beaked, and many-brained; it has blue blood, three hearts, and eight arms; it can change color and shape at will, and comes equipped with an ink sac for defense (or, presumably, calligraphy). 

It is, in total, so weird that people have genuinely suggested it could be extraterrestrial in origin. And yet, despite being so very different from most every other form of life, it possesses a striking intelligence – one that can seem oh so familiar at times. 

“I remember reading one [anecdote] about a lab where all the fish were going missing from their tank,” recalled Jon Ablett, senior curator of mollusks and cephalopods at the Natural History Museum, London in 2018. “The staff set up a little video camera and it turned out that one of the octopuses was getting out of its tank, going to the other tank, opening it, eating the fish, closing the lid, going back to its own tank and hiding the evidence.”

We know what you’re thinking: that’s cute, but nothing my dog can’t do. And sure, but octopuses can also do things like navigate mazes and use tools for shelter. They can learn skills just from watching someone else, and hold petty grudges against individuals even if those individuals aren’t other octopuses. They’ve built multiple entire octopus cities – albeit for a very liberal definition of “city”.

They are, in short, almost unbelievably intelligent. But as obvious as this braininess seems to us today, that wasn’t always the case. In fact, at one time, they were considered particularly stupid – and it was all thanks to one guy.



“The octopus is a stupid creature, for it will approach a man’s hand if it be lowered in the water,” declared Aristotle in his The History of Animals, written sometime in the fourth century BCE. 

“The octopus as a rule does not live the year out,” he wrote. “It has a natural tendency to run off into liquid; for, if beaten and squeezed, it keeps losing substance and at last disappears. The female after [laying eggs] is peculiarly subject to this […] it becomes stupid; if tossed about by waves, it submits impassively; a man, if he dived, could catch it with the hand; it gets covered over with slime, and makes no effort to catch its wonted prey.”

It’s not exactly a ringing endorsement of what we now know to be a highly intelligent species – but, for a while at least, it caught on. It was repeated uncritically by Pliny some 400 years later, who at least generously admitted that “though [it] is in other respects deemed a stupid animal […] it has a certain kind of sense in its domestic economy.”

Here’s the obvious problem with Aristotle’s logic, though: that drive to investigate a human hand plunged into their environment? That’s curiosity – and today, it’s recognized as exactly the opposite of what Aristotle thought.

“Octopuses meet every criteria for the definition of intelligence,” wrote Lisa Poncet, a biologist in the laboratory of animal and human ethology (EthoS) at the University of Caen Normandie, in a 2021 article for The Conversation. “They show a great flexibility in obtaining information (using several senses and learning socially), in processing it (through discriminative and conditional learning), in storing it (through long-term memory) and in applying it toward both predators and prey.”

And one of the ways that intelligence manifests itself is in the creatures’ unquenchable curiosity: “[They] will spend their time catching hands, nets or any other object introduced to their tank,” Poncet explained. 

“From there, it is up to them to decide when to release their catch,” she wrote. Not so stupid after all, hey, Aristotle?

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Jetty raises $23M to help give renters more payment flexibility
  2. Swedish budget gives boost for welfare, climate, jobs
  3. Glorious Video Shows Whale Sharks Feeding On The Bottom Of The Ocean For First Time
  4. Octopus DNA Reveals Arctic Ice Sheet Could Collapse Sooner Than Expected

Source Link: What Aristotle Got Wrong About The Octopus

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Inhaling “Laughing Gas” Could Treat Severe Depression, Live Seven-Arm Octopus Spotted In The Deep Sea, And Much More This Week
  • People Are Surprised To Learn That The Closest Planet To Neptune Turns Out To Be Mercury
  • The Age-Old “Grandmother Rule” Of Washing Is Backed By Science
  • How Hero Of Alexandria Used Ancient Science To Make “Magical Acts Of The Gods” 2,000 Years Ago
  • This 120-Million-Year-Old Bird Choked To Death On Over 800 Stones. Why? Nobody Knows
  • Radiation Fog: A 643-Kilometer Belt Of Mist Lingers Over California’s Central Valley
  • New Images Of Comet 3I/ATLAS From 4 Different Missions Reveal A Peculiar Little World
  • Neanderthals Used Reindeer Bones To Skin Animals And Make Leather Clothes
  • Why Do Power Lines Have Those Big Colorful Balls On Them?
  • Rare Peek Inside An Egg Sac Reveals An Adorable Developing Leopard Shark
  • What Is A Superhabitable Planet And Have We Found Any?
  • The Moon Will Travel Across The Sky With A Friend On Sunday. Here’s What To Know
  • How Fast Does Sound Travel Across The Worlds Of The Solar System?
  • A Wonky-Necked Giraffe In California Lived To 21 Against The Odds
  • Seal Finger: What Is This Horrible Infection That Makes Your Hand Swell Like A Balloon?
  • “They Usually Aren’t Second Tier”: When Wolves Adopt Pups From Rival Packs
  • The Road To New Physics Beyond Our Knowledge Might Pass Through Neutrinos
  • Flu Season Is Revving Up – What Are The Symptoms To Look Out For?
  • Asteroid Bennu Was Missing Just One Ingredient Needed To Kickstart Life – We just Found It
  • Rare Core Samples Provide “Once In A Lifetime” Opportunity To Study The Giant Line That Slices Through Scotland
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version