The beginnings of ethology (1809–1882) explored the expression of emotions in animals. Ethologists have been concerned particularly with the
evolution of behaviour and its understanding in terms of
natural selection. In one sense, the first modern ethologist was
Charles Darwin, whose 1872 book
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals influenced many ethologists. He pursued his interest in behaviour by encouraging his protégé
George Romanes, who investigated animal learning and intelligence using an
anthropomorphic method,
anecdotal cognitivism, that did not gain scientific support. Other early ethologists, such as
Eugène Marais,
Charles O. Whitman,
Oskar Heinroth,
Wallace Craig and
Julian Huxley, instead concentrated on behaviours that can be called
instinctive in that they occur in all members of a species under specified circumstances. Lorenz, Tinbergen, and von Frisch were jointly awarded the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1973 for their work of developing ethology. Ethology is now a well-recognized scientific discipline, with its own journals such as
Animal Behaviour,
Applied Animal Behaviour Science,
Animal Cognition,
Behaviour,
Behavioral Ecology and
Ethology. In 1972, the
International Society for Human Ethology was founded along with its journal,
Human Ethology.
Social ethology In 1972, the English ethologist John H. Crook distinguished comparative ethology from social ethology, and argued that much of the ethology that had existed so far was really comparative ethology—examining animals as individuals—whereas, in the future, ethologists would need to concentrate on the behaviour of social groups of animals and the social structure within them.
E. O. Wilson's book
Sociobiology: The New Synthesis appeared in 1975, and since that time, the study of behaviour has been much more concerned with social aspects. It has been driven by the Darwinism associated with Wilson,
Robert Trivers, and
W. D. Hamilton. The related development of
behavioural ecology has helped transform ethology. Furthermore, a substantial rapprochement with
comparative psychology has occurred, so the modern scientific study of behaviour offers a spectrum of approaches. In 2020, Tobias Starzak and Albert Newen from the Institute of Philosophy II at the
Ruhr University Bochum postulated that animals may have beliefs. ==Tinbergen's four questions for ethologists==