F
Forever Sleep
Earned it we have...
- May 4, 2022
- 13,617
I think animals do display behaviour that suggests empathy. There have been reports of whales and dolphins saving each other and humans from drowning. They clearly must have understood the distress of another mammal needing to breath.
Animals often show acts of kindness and bravery to protect and save others- sometimes, not even their own kin.
Do you suppose they have moral sensibilities the way humans have though? Will they stop an innate behaviour because they recognise it to be cruel? Do omnivores regularly become herbivores in the wild? A vegan bear. I can't really imagine it. Do many animals care about sexual consent?
There have been stories of cats bringing their owners leaves. Was that because they realised themselves bringing home live prey to toy with wasn't kind or, was it the shocked response of the owners being presented with a live mouse? What do you think?
This isn't meaning to degrade animal intelligence or strength of emotion. I do however, tend to believe it's different. The more worrying trait being that those with very high intelligence- orcas, chimps etc. can sometimes display the most cruelty.
So- that's another question- at our natural core, are we cruel? Is it just things like morals, religion, the law holding us in check? Have we evolved to be nicer to one another maybe? We're a social species. Maybe we've developed more symbiotic genes to work together- rather than constantly compete/ fight. Although- we still do that of course.
Animals often show acts of kindness and bravery to protect and save others- sometimes, not even their own kin.
Do you suppose they have moral sensibilities the way humans have though? Will they stop an innate behaviour because they recognise it to be cruel? Do omnivores regularly become herbivores in the wild? A vegan bear. I can't really imagine it. Do many animals care about sexual consent?
There have been stories of cats bringing their owners leaves. Was that because they realised themselves bringing home live prey to toy with wasn't kind or, was it the shocked response of the owners being presented with a live mouse? What do you think?
This isn't meaning to degrade animal intelligence or strength of emotion. I do however, tend to believe it's different. The more worrying trait being that those with very high intelligence- orcas, chimps etc. can sometimes display the most cruelty.
So- that's another question- at our natural core, are we cruel? Is it just things like morals, religion, the law holding us in check? Have we evolved to be nicer to one another maybe? We're a social species. Maybe we've developed more symbiotic genes to work together- rather than constantly compete/ fight. Although- we still do that of course.