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Symmetry wrote:
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
natty_dread wrote:Well... animals mostly follow their instincts.
natty_dread wrote:I don't think animals can comprehend the concept of "cuteness". For wild animals at least. For domesticated ones, it might be a bit different, but most wild animals just basically see things from the view of survival and propagating their genes.
Gillipig wrote:So do we.
Gillipig wrote:That's just a wild guess from your part.
Gillipig wrote: I find it quite likely that elephants or other animals that protect their young for a long time have extensive feelings for them.
Gillipig wrote:What makes you think we don't see things in terms of survival and reproduction too? We're no different than other animals in that sense.
Gillipig wrote:We've been created under the same rules. The rules of evolution.
Gillipig wrote:This is actually a discussion I'd like to have unlike many pointless discussions I've taken part in here on CC
natty_dread wrote:Gillipig wrote:So do we.
No we don't. We have higher brain functions that allow us to override those instincts.
natty_dread wrote:Gillipig wrote:I find it quite likely that elephants or other animals that protect their young for a long time have extensive feelings for them. Quite similar to our own.
Which is not the same as recognizing the abstract concept of "cuteness". Feelings are one thing, abstract thought is another.
natty_dread wrote:Gillipig wrote:What makes you think we don't see things in terms of survival and reproduction too? We're no different than other animals in that sense.
Because we don't have to think just about survival and reproduction anymore. We have evolved past that point where that was our only concern. We have the capacity to think of abstract concepts, something most other animals lack. We are able to override our basic animal instincts, we can choose if we follow those instincts or not. All thanks to higher brain functions.
natty_dread wrote:Gillipig wrote:We've been created under the same rules. The rules of evolution.
Amoebas are a product of evolution too. So are bacteria and viruses. Not to mention plants and fungi. Yet they have very little in common with, say, chimpanzees. The interesting thing about evolution is that it's capable of producing an incredible diversity of life. We have tons of life forms on this planet that are very different from us.
natty_dread wrote:I don't think you quite comprehend the "rules of evolution". It's not a strict set of rules that makes us all evolve towards some universal goal.
natty_dread wrote:Evolution quite simply just means that organisms adapt to their circumstances. We evolve to have the qualities that best help us to adapt to the environment we live in, and two organisms evolving in different places can evolve to have very different qualities. That's called selection pressure.
For certain reasons, we humans found it beneficial to develop higher brain functions. Also, evolution doesn't just stop there. Just because our instincts were important to us at caveman times, doesn't mean that all of those instincts are helpful now.
natty_dread wrote:So we are constantly evolving to adapt to modern life. That means that instincts that no longer benefit our survival are slowly fading away from the gene pool.
natty_dread wrote:Gillipig wrote:This is actually a discussion I'd like to have unlike many pointless discussions I've taken part in here on CC
Feel free to create a new thread for it.
Lootifer wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNpeTCEPrRk
Off the chain cute! (yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive, doesnt stop it being cute though)
Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
Fallacious statement
Lootifer wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNpeTCEPrRk
Off the chain cute! (yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive, doesnt stop it being cute though)
Symmetry wrote:Lootifer wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNpeTCEPrRk
Off the chain cute! (yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive, doesnt stop it being cute though)
That was a great cute baby animal video, and it is appreciated.
Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
Fallacious statement
How so?
natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
Fallacious statement
How so?
A cat with no eyeballs would survive if it was living in an environment where having eyes wasn't strictly necessary for survival.
For example, there are some lizards and fish that live in places with almost no light at all, and they have evolved to have no eyes.
Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
Fallacious statement
How so?
A cat with no eyeballs would survive if it was living in an environment where having eyes wasn't strictly necessary for survival.
For example, there are some lizards and fish that live in places with almost no light at all, and they have evolved to have no eyes.
LOL! Now you're just being a dickWell played though I guess.
However if we are being anal, cats in their current stage of evolution would result in the little guy not surviving. Not only do cats rely heavily on their eyes, it wouldn't even get to that point because the mother of the litter would abandon it as soon as it realised it couldn't keep up (in the wild of course - some "modern" mother cats are more tolerant).
Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:natty_dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
Fallacious statement
How so?
A cat with no eyeballs would survive if it was living in an environment where having eyes wasn't strictly necessary for survival.
For example, there are some lizards and fish that live in places with almost no light at all, and they have evolved to have no eyes.
LOL! Now you're just being a dick
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