Introduction
The owner’s observation that the dog jumps on the sofa only at night implies a sophisticated mental capacity. This claim centres on whether the dog represents another’s knowledge state rather than simply reacting to visible cues or learned associations. The following analysis evaluates this interpretation against the Theory of Mind (ToM) hierarchy and clarifies why it constitutes knowledge attribution rather than weaker or stronger mentalistic abilities.
Identifying the Claim as Mentalistic
The owner asserts that the dog “knows that once we have gone to bed, we won’t know that he is on the sofa.” This formulation presupposes that the dog tracks a past perceptual event—the family’s departure to bed—and infers its consequence for current knowledge. Such reasoning exceeds purely non-mentalistic explanations. Simple associative learning would require only that the absence of lights or human presence has been paired with safety from punishment. Behaviour reading would demand only sensitivity to the owner’s current location or posture. The owner’s language, however, invokes an internal state of ignorance in absent others, thereby crossing into mentalistic territory.
Locating the Claim Within the ToM Hierarchy
Within the established hierarchy, the claim aligns most closely with knowledge attribution: the understanding that another’s knowledge depends on prior perceptual access (Huber & Lonardo, 2023). It surpasses Level 1 perspective-taking, which involves detecting another’s line of sight in the present moment, because the family is upstairs and thus invisible. Yet it stops short of belief attribution, which requires representing a mental state that misrepresents reality (Krupenye & Call, 2019). No false belief is attributed here; the family is simply described as lacking information. Likewise, it does not reach Level 2 perspective-taking, which concerns how a situation visually appears from another’s viewpoint. The owner does not claim the dog imagines the lounge scene as the sleeping family would perceive it.
Conclusion
The interpretation is therefore cognitively ambitious: it credits the dog with a selective representation of others’ knowledge based on past experience, while remaining below the more complex forms of belief reasoning documented in some non-human primates. This precise placement informs the search for simpler mechanisms and targeted experiments that follow.
References
- Huber, L. and Lonardo, L. (2023) Canine perspective-taking. Animal Cognition, 26(1), pp. 275-298.
- Krupenye, C. and Call, J. (2019) Theory of mind in animals: Current and future directions. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science, 10(6), e1503.

