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Edited on Sun Jan-14-07 08:19 PM by frogcycle
characteristics to various animals, usually their pets, it is my considered opinion that the "conventional wisdom" prevalent in science that "dumb animals" can't "think" and don't have emotions is a big crock. It stems from the religious dominance in the middle ages as modern science was emerging. the pope said that the bible says we're different - "made in god's image" - so there must be this vast gulf between humans and all animals. So intelligent social animals like whales, wolves, lions, chimps, etc were all said to be equivalent to a grasshopper in brainpower.
We still have strong vestiges of that today. Animal behaviorists insist they don't see what they see - that the critters can ONLY be exhibiting pavlovian responses.
That is what makes me so furious about all the handwringing over stem cells, assisted suicide, etc. Because they are "human life" we sanctify them, but we can put elephants in zoos where they can barely turn around, kill animals for fur or supposed aphrodesiacs, whatever. Or just for the "sport" of it.
I saw a fantastic program a year or so ago - probably on animal planet - about a place in Tn. that takes in "rescue" elephants from zoos and circuses. They provide veterinary care, usually a lot needed, and have a cpl hundred acres the herd roams. STILL less than they'd have naturally. So they showed this newly-rescued elephant from some fleabag circus, in pretty bad shape with a bad foot, when she arrived. She was put in a holding pen separate from the others just to be cautious; the herd came back from the field and one broke away and rushed to the fence, reached through, and the two intertwined trunks. They had been in the same circus THIRTY YEARS earlier!
The next day the newcomer was escorted by her old friend - she could not keep up because of her bad foot, so the other stayed back, walked with her, showed her the way to wherever the herd went in the daytime.
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