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Animal emotions - I
Wed, 10 May 2006 22:26:56 GMT
rec.pets.dogs.behavior
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Leif Erikson...
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Animals do not feel or exhibit "pride". When a
domestic cat drops a dead mouse at the back door and
looks at you, it is not showing "pride". The animal
has no sense that you might be pleased by the outcome,
or that *you* might feel some kind of "pride" in having
a good mouser for a cat. This kind of thinking simply
is not part of a cat's mental world.
Ron...
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Cat's will actually bring you a mouse as a present.
Leif Erikson...
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No.
Whining, Crying, Bawl...
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Yes. They won't bring you a mouse 'cause no cat could like you Goober.
Leif Erikson...
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No. Cats do not have a concept of "gift" or "present". You are seeing
something you want to see in it, ronnnnnnnnnnie, based on a defect in
your thinking. You don't think correctly about reality.
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The plural of cat is cats, not "cat's".
Leif Erikson...
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You need lots of correction, ronnnnnnnnnnnie, you pathetic impotent
ineffectual twit.
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Whining, Crying, Bawl...
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Thank you for the correction Goober.
Maybe you've found your niche. Correcting grammer and spelling.
It could be quite rewarding. Maybe you'd get your ass kicked less.
dh...
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LOL! Goo would probably just screw that up too. Ineptitude
appears to be the Goober's dominant characteristic.
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Jack Crenshaw...
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Thank you, Dr. Descartes.
You were wrong then, you are wrong now.
bill.reich...
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Excellent.
Will in New Haven
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bill.reich...
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While no one can know that a cat feels this or that, it is also the
case that you cannot know what a cat (or a dog) does not feel. In your
arrogance, you seek to correct the beliefs of others and replace them
with your own unproven beliefs. Aside from wasting your own time and
that of anyone who decides to read your posts, was there a point?
Will in New Haven
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