Jackrabbit
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- Aug 7, 2006
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I think if I were to say humans had emotions than I would have to say also that reptiles have emotions. If I were to say humans do not emotions I would thus say reptiles do not have emotions. Not to mention I will upset people by defining instinct and emotion as synonymous in meaning, yet separated by human bias and want to be above animals.
So how do you explain the absense of any learnings when humans are born?
When a snake is born it already knows everything it needs to know to survive, a human needs to be shown EVERYTHING.
A snake knows when it is in danger. We have to learn that something is not good for us whatever it might be. I believe reptiles at least show no emotion but act simply on instinct.
As for cats and dogs since they are mammals like us they have the ability to learn things and so can develop what we might call an emotional attachment. Show me a video of a snake that has learnt something new to their baser instincts. Cobras swaying to music in India doesn't count.
How does a snake show fear when it strikes at you even though it knows it can't eat you, or through the glass of its enclosure. It is displaying territorial threats and will do that as many times as needed until it thinks it has warded the threat off. In the wild a snake turns and runs from a bigger opponent not because it is scared of it but because it knows it has been bested by a superior animal, that is the way of the jungle. It isn't an emotion. It simply moves on to find an area it can control.