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Goo ****wit David Lying ****bag Harrison lied:
On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 01:06:41 -0400, Logic316 wrote: wrote: I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself. A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself. -- I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself. A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself. This poem is fundamentally flawed. Most animals, including avian species, lack the necessary mental capacity to have a sense of "self" in the first place. - Logic316 There are examples that suggest otherwise. For example: We all know that a dog is aware of his balls, so what would make us believe he is not aware of himself? They fail the mirror test, for one, ****wit, you ****ing ****bag. A dog is not aware that its tail is "its" tail. It's aware of THE tail, and if you step on tail it yelps. It does not know that the tail is "its" tail, or that its paw is "its" paw. If you approach a dog that will let you approach it at all, and calmly extend a pair of garden shears as if you're going to cut off the dog's front paw, it will not react. It doesn't have the sense of self required to think, "This stranger might intend to hurt me." Dogs, cats, cattle, almost all animals "lower" than the great apes have no sense of self. |
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dh@. wrote:
On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 05:25:50 GMT, Rudy Canoza wrote: NanK wrote: Yes, they do! When they see you outside the tank, don't they wiggle with anticipation of being fed??? No. That's stimulus response, *not* anticipation. That stimulus response *is* anticipation Goo. I would have to agree. "Anticipation" simply means sensing that an event is going to occur. If somebody punches you a couple of times in the face, you're naturally going to remember the pain and try to avoid his hand next time you see it coming towards you - that's anticipation, and it's done without using any abstract thought. But somewhere in that fish's tiny brain there is a piece of data being stored which tells it that there's going to be food when it sees the image of a person in front of it's tank. This information was not genetically inherited from it's parents, not will it pass it on through it's DNA to it's offspring, so it can't be called instinct. It is, in fact, a memory - learned information. It's a very primitive sort of learning, just barely above the level of instinct, but learning nevertheless. But it does not imply or require that the fish is consciously thinking or reflecting about what it's doing. - Logic316 "A wise and frugal Government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement." -- Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural address - 1801 |
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mid-post
dh@. wrote: Goo insists that no animals can anticipate, but that humans are somehow projecting their emotions into the animals causing them to behave in a way which gives the obvious appearance that they are experiencing them themselves...most likely through voodoo or something...it's bizarre, whatever it is. Perhaps he's referring to "anthropomorphism". Yes, people are often guilty of attributing human qualities and motives to things that aren't human. Just look at the Disney channel :-P The only question I have, could such a fish (one having learned to associate the presence of humans with food) learn to distinguish between humans and other large creatures who show up in front of it's tank who don't feed it (like dogs or cats)? - Logic316 Most likely they can learn to avoid things as well as anticipate getting food from them. Amusingly, Goo can understand that animals feel fear and anger, but can't understand that they also feel pride, anticipation and disappointment. It's amusing, but in an almost pitiable way. 'Fear' and 'anger' are among the most primal of emotions, present even in most lower lifeforms. These help ensure survival by allowing the organism to either flee danger, or fight off threats to its food and territory. 'Anticipation' is not an emotion; it's the condition of merely having knowledge of an upcoming event, and acting on it. As for 'pride', that's a far more complex emotion which involves feeling pleasure from knowing that you acquired, accomplished or succeeded at something - which you definitely won't find in a fish. The closest instinct you can find to that in a fish is simply territoriality and aggression. As for 'disappointment', that's also a complex mammalian emotion involving a feeling of dissatisfaction that results when one's expectations are not realized. Again, I doubt a fish can feel that; if it sees and tries to obtain food or a mate and it fails to do so, they don't have the capacity to think about their loss - they just keep trying and keep going about the business of survival. - Logic316 "Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first." -- Ronald Reagan |
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A GOOGLE search may direct you to the latest research where scientists
have actually taught flies to follow a particular flight pattern in controlled experiments! And did you know that bees remove the legs on a fellow worker bee that habitually returns "drunk" on fermented nector. If you watch Animal Planet and Discovery, you have learned about the complexity of elephants, dolphins, wolves, and many other animals and insects. Recently, I saw a clip where an unhappy, aquarium-housed octopus was given a Duplo (jumbo toy blocks) structure with window-shaped holes, and the animal immediately perked up and investigated the structure and its openings. Wild birds have demonstrated uncanny abilities to figure out puzzles in order to obtain a tasty morsel. Parrots can watch you unlock a cage, and repeat your action. No training, no conditioning -- just brain power. Many bored, lonely, anxious pets (birds, rats, cats, dogs, horses) and zoo animals, i.e., pandas, marsupials, monkeys, develop behavior problems when confined in inappropriate conditions. Experts constantly seek to improve zoos and rescue facilities for this very reason. Rescue groups anxiously rehabilitate and rehome orphaned animals according to the needs of the species. (Did you catch the otters on "GROWING UP OTTER"?) We assume a whole lot more than we should about the animals with whom we share this planet. Perhaps our fish ARE capable of learning, recognition, and feelings. Who among us knows for sure? n |
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NanK wrote:
A GOOGLE search may direct you to the latest research where scientists have actually taught flies to follow a particular flight pattern in controlled experiments! And did you know that bees remove the legs on a fellow worker bee that habitually returns "drunk" on fermented nector. Perhaps we should follow a similar approach with drunk drivers. On the first offense, take away their cars. On the second offense, remove their legs so they can't operate the pedals. If you watch Animal Planet and Discovery, you have learned about the complexity of elephants, dolphins, wolves, and many other animals and insects. Recently, I saw a clip where an unhappy, aquarium-housed octopus was given a Duplo (jumbo toy blocks) structure with window-shaped holes, and the animal immediately perked up and investigated the structure and its openings. Most animals are naturally curious. It benefits their survival to explore their environment as thoroughly as possible. Wild birds have demonstrated uncanny abilities to figure out puzzles in order to obtain a tasty morsel. Parrots can watch you unlock a cage, and repeat your action. No training, no conditioning -- just brain power. That's called 'learning through imitating', something parrots are particularly good at. I've seen pretty clever horses do it too. But if they could figure out on their own how to unlock a cage, that would be an entirely different story. Many bored, lonely, anxious pets (birds, rats, cats, dogs, horses) and zoo animals, i.e., pandas, marsupials, monkeys, develop behavior problems when confined in inappropriate conditions. Yes. It's been proven that higher animals can actually experience boredom and stress when their brains are not sufficiently stimulated. We assume a whole lot more than we should about the animals with whom we share this planet. Wait a minute there hippie, this isn't just a "planet". It's an entire WORLD, and one of a kind at that. And we don't share it. Humans OWN it. We didn't rise to the top of the food chain by putting the interests of competing species on the same level as ours. A black bear isn't going to respect *your* rights if it's hungry or if you happen to be in it's territory near its cubs. Perhaps our fish ARE capable of learning, recognition, and feelings. Fish are capable of learning, certainly. Recognition, maybe or maybe not. I'd need to see some experiments done on that. I know that amphibians and reptiles can often differentiate the appearance of their owner from other people, but fish in the store seem to do that "fishy dance" no matter who shows up in front of their tank. - Logic316 "A liberal is a conservative who's been arrested. A conservative is a liberal who's been mugged." -- Wendy Kaminer |
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![]() "Logic316" wrote in message ... NanK wrote: A GOOGLE search may direct you to the latest research where scientists have actually taught flies to follow a particular flight pattern in controlled experiments! And did you know that bees remove the legs on a fellow worker bee that habitually returns "drunk" on fermented nector. Perhaps we should follow a similar approach with drunk drivers. On the first offense, take away their cars. On the second offense, remove their legs so they can't operate the pedals. ============ Nah, then you'd have to "accomodate" them under the ADA, and they wouldn't have lost any privledges. If you watch Animal Planet and Discovery, you have learned about the complexity of elephants, dolphins, wolves, and many other animals and insects. Recently, I saw a clip where an unhappy, aquarium-housed octopus was given a Duplo (jumbo toy blocks) structure with window-shaped holes, and the animal immediately perked up and investigated the structure and its openings. Most animals are naturally curious. It benefits their survival to explore their environment as thoroughly as possible. Wild birds have demonstrated uncanny abilities to figure out puzzles in order to obtain a tasty morsel. Parrots can watch you unlock a cage, and repeat your action. No training, no conditioning -- just brain power. That's called 'learning through imitating', something parrots are particularly good at. I've seen pretty clever horses do it too. But if they could figure out on their own how to unlock a cage, that would be an entirely different story. Many bored, lonely, anxious pets (birds, rats, cats, dogs, horses) and zoo animals, i.e., pandas, marsupials, monkeys, develop behavior problems when confined in inappropriate conditions. Yes. It's been proven that higher animals can actually experience boredom and stress when their brains are not sufficiently stimulated. We assume a whole lot more than we should about the animals with whom we share this planet. Wait a minute there hippie, this isn't just a "planet". It's an entire WORLD, and one of a kind at that. And we don't share it. Humans OWN it. We didn't rise to the top of the food chain by putting the interests of competing species on the same level as ours. A black bear isn't going to respect *your* rights if it's hungry or if you happen to be in it's territory near its cubs. Perhaps our fish ARE capable of learning, recognition, and feelings. Fish are capable of learning, certainly. Recognition, maybe or maybe not. I'd need to see some experiments done on that. I know that amphibians and reptiles can often differentiate the appearance of their owner from other people, but fish in the store seem to do that "fishy dance" no matter who shows up in front of their tank. - Logic316 "A liberal is a conservative who's been arrested. A conservative is a liberal who's been mugged." -- Wendy Kaminer |
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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 Goo wrote:
dh wrote: On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 01:06:41 -0400, Logic316 wrote: wrote: I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself. A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself. -- I never saw a wild thing sorry for itself. A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough without ever having felt sorry for itself. This poem is fundamentally flawed. Most animals, including avian species, lack the necessary mental capacity to have a sense of "self" in the first place. - Logic316 There are examples that suggest otherwise. For example: We all know that a dog is aware of his balls, so what would make us believe he is not aware of himself? They fail the mirror test, for one, ****wit, you ****ing ****bag. A dog is not aware that its tail is "its" tail. It's aware of THE tail, and if you step on tail it yelps. It does not know that the tail is "its" tail, There is no reason to believe anything so stupid as that Goo, but there is reason not to. For example: dogs mark their territory, and know that it's their territory. You are amazingly ignorant. It's no wonder they call you Goobernicus. or that its paw is "its" paw. If you approach a dog that will let you approach it at all, and calmly extend a pair of garden shears as if you're going to cut off the dog's front paw, it will not react. It doesn't have the sense of self required to think, "This stranger might intend to hurt me." That's not it Goober. They don't understand that garden shears could hurt them, and that's all there is to that little fantasy. Dogs, cats, cattle, almost all animals "lower" than the great apes have no sense of self. You are the last person who would know if they do Goo, that's for sure. They indicate by their behavior that they do, and there is absolutely no reason at all to believe they don't. |
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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 Goo wrote:
dh wrote: On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 05:25:50 GMT, Rudy Canoza wrote: NanK wrote: Yes, they do! When they see you outside the tank, don't they wiggle with anticipation of being fed??? No. That's stimulus response, *not* anticipation. That stimulus response *is* anticipation Goobernicus. No, ****wit, you idiot, it isn't anticipation. Anticipation is THINKING about something BEFORE the stimulus is present. Not always Goo. Sometimes the stimulus stimulates it. Maybe that's why it's called stimulus, you Goober. |
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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 13:16:04 -0400, Logic316 wrote:
mid-post dh@. wrote: Goo insists that no animals can anticipate, but that humans are somehow projecting their emotions into the animals causing them to behave in a way which gives the obvious appearance that they are experiencing them themselves...most likely through voodoo or something...it's bizarre, whatever it is. Perhaps he's referring to "anthropomorphism". Yes, people are often guilty of attributing human qualities and motives to things that aren't human. Just look at the Disney channel :-P It can go either way...people can attribute too much to animals, but they also can be ignorant of what animals are capable of. The latter is the case with Goo. But. Goo does insist that a fantasy about a talking pig--an extreme case of anthropomorphism written by one of his fellow "ARAs"--somehow refutes the fact that some farm animals benefit from farming. The only question I have, could such a fish (one having learned to associate the presence of humans with food) learn to distinguish between humans and other large creatures who show up in front of it's tank who don't feed it (like dogs or cats)? - Logic316 Most likely they can learn to avoid things as well as anticipate getting food from them. Amusingly, Goo can understand that animals feel fear and anger, but can't understand that they also feel pride, anticipation and disappointment. It's amusing, but in an almost pitiable way. 'Fear' and 'anger' are among the most primal of emotions, present even in most lower lifeforms. These help ensure survival by allowing the organism to either flee danger, or fight off threats to its food and territory. 'Anticipation' is not an emotion; it's the condition of merely having knowledge of an upcoming event, and acting on it. As for 'pride', that's a far more complex emotion which involves feeling pleasure from knowing that you acquired, accomplished or succeeded at something - which you definitely won't find in a fish. The closest instinct you can find to that in a fish is simply territoriality and aggression. As for 'disappointment', that's also a complex mammalian emotion involving a feeling of dissatisfaction that results when one's expectations are not realized. Again, I doubt a fish can feel that; if it sees and tries to obtain food or a mate and it fails to do so, they don't have the capacity to think about their loss - they just keep trying and keep going about the business of survival. - Logic316 That's probably the case with fish, but some animals do experience disappointment even if fish don't. This is another area of Goo's extreme ignorance. Here are a couple of his classic quotes: __________________________________________________ _______ From: Rudy Canoza Date: Mon, 04 Jul 2005 15:48:32 GMT Animals do not experience pride or disappointment. Period. [...] No animals anticipate. ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ His ignorance is so pure, that he doesn't even consider the possibility that some animals are capable of experiencing things that other animals are not capable of. That is very shallow "thinking", and in many ways very primitive and animal like imo. |
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