"Animals" is way too broad. Vertebrates probably can, with higher probability with increased complexity. Invertebrates probably only have rudimentary 'thinking' ability and no emotions.
I can't think of a single animal that we eat that would eat us, and even most predators don't usually go after humans on a regular basis.
I know you didn't mean anything by the comment, but one of my biggest pet peeves is people portraying predators like bears, and big cats as vicious monsters that are constantly attacking people, when they're really not.
Right, octopodes (not -pi) are probably a very interesting exception.Although octopi have been shown to have basic problem solving abilities, even though their brain is distributed throughout their body.
Oh yeah, I know that, but a lot of movies and books like to show predators specifically targeting people, and they don't usually do that. If a situations arises where a person is convenient prey, they might take it, but they won't go out of their way just to attack people.Only because they're smart enough to know humans are dangerous. Not because they have any moral objection to attacking them.
There's not really any carnivorous animal whose decision not to attack humans is based on empathy and not "That thing too big, too big a risk".
Oh yeah, I know that, but a lot of movies and books like to show predators specifically targeting people, and they don't usually do that. If a situations arises where a person is convenient prey, they might take it, but they won't go out of their way just to attack people.
Your animals, that you spend time around, certainly do have thinking brains, and emotional responses... but they're not just like us... & I don't say that to diminish them, only to highlight the differentiation. They don't think or feel in the same ways we do.I know that some people try to say they operate purely on instinct, but I don't know how anybody could spend more than 5 minutes around almost any animal and not see that they are thinking and feeling beings just like us.
That's an odd distinction though. We're omnivores. We can eat just about any animal. We choose to eat & farm the ones we frequently eat for specific reasons, chief most among them their ease in handling. which would include not being dangerous enough to eat us.I can't think of a single animal that we eat that would eat us
Because we're not usually an active part of their normal food chain, or even their local environment in most cases, but as we've agreed, many predators like mammalian ones do think, & once they start thinking human might be good on their menu, then the possibility of open season is very likely.and even most predators don't usually go after humans on a regular basis
And I get pretty tired of dumb movie nonsense like that, personally.Oh yeah, I know that, but a lot of movies and books like to show predators specifically targeting people, and they don't usually do that.
This is obviously nonsense. Do you think cats never climb indoors? Do you think they never fight, whether for play or for real? If a declawed cat accidentally got outside, would you have it be defenseless? Is furniture that damn important that a cat has to be maimed for it?Cats only need claws if they are outdoor cats.
This is obviously nonsense. Do you think cats never climb indoors? Do you think they never fight, whether for play or for real? If a declawed cat accidentally got outside, would you have it be defenseless? Is furniture that damn important that a cat has to be maimed for it?
I had a cat who had a thing about hair - human hair. She'd sit on the back of my chair and run her claws through my hair, as a way of grooming me. I found it relaxing.
One of my chairs is an incredibly tattered armchair. The cats have definitely rendered it down to bare wood in places. But y'know what? I don't care. I've got plenty of blankets and afghans to hide that, and it's a comfortable chair. I have fond memories of dozing there, or reading a book, with my cats snuggling in with me. We were in our own little island of togetherness on that chair, and that is what matters far more than what it looks like.
Oh, PLEASE.Of course they instinctively do that stuff but it isn’t required for survival. You’re applying a purity test that just doesn’t matter to most people. If you feel like it’s a horrible crime to take away their claws because they instinctively scratch and climb you shouldn’t be spaying them.
Okay, cut off one-third of every digit you have - fingers, thumbs, and toes. Then see how well you cope. That's what you want to do to cats - for YOUR CONVENIENCE.If you’re going to be righteously outraged that people modify their pets bodies for their convenience, you can’t pick and choose which modifications are acceptable and which aren’t. It’s okay to take away their ability to perform their basic procreation instincts but not okay to take away their ability to climb the drapes?
Unless it's medically necessary. I had a cat whose front paws were deformed and she couldn't retract her claws, which caused her pain. So she was declawed for her own wellbeing.Declawing should be illegal, period.
Medically necessary is a different thing. The people I have no patience with are those who do it for "convenience" (theirs, not the cat's), and for the sake of some piece of furniture they'll probably get rid of long before they get rid of the cat (unless they get rid of the cat because of its distress at having one third of all its digits amputated).Unless it's medically necessary. I had a cat whose front paws were deformed and she couldn't retract her claws, which caused her pain. So she was declawed for her own wellbeing.
That's a terrible comparison.Of course they instinctively do that stuff but it isn’t required for survival. You’re applying a purity test that just doesn’t matter to most people. If you feel like it’s a horrible crime to take away their claws because they instinctively scratch and climb you shouldn’t be spaying them.
If you’re going to be righteously outraged that people modify their pets bodies for their convenience, you can’t pick and choose which modifications are acceptable and which aren’t. It’s okay to take away their ability to perform their basic procreation instincts but not okay to take away their ability to climb the drapes?
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