Secret Chief
Veteran Member
A winking face changes not the facts. Humans are animals.I am not.
I can speak and write, and in 5 languages...which means I have evolved from that stage.
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A winking face changes not the facts. Humans are animals.I am not.
I can speak and write, and in 5 languages...which means I have evolved from that stage.
When a chimp writes an essay about his/her life, I will say that we are still animals.A winking face changes not the facts. Humans are animals.
This thread is about the notion of war, in general.You might not have noticed that
he's the leading candidate in the
2024 election.
I agree that humans are animals.This thread is about the notion of war, in general.
So you do agree with the OP?
Plenty of other animals think to greater or lesser extent. We can't know exactly how well (or indeed how differently) they think, but there is plenty of evidence to suggest some animals are much smarter than we've traditionally given them credit for. Also, loads of animals can do all sorts of things we can't. Having unique characteristics doesn't render any animal "above" or "outside" the overall animal kingdom. Our creative intelligence allows us to think we're better than all other animals (often that we're better than other humans too, hence war), but that doesn't make it true.We are different than animals because we can engage in thinking.
And humans have survival instincts (if we didn't, we wouldn't survive). Because we are animals.Survival instinct if what animals have.
That wasn't the point of mentioning extinction. The point was that for all of our "superior" intelligence and technology, we're as likely to destroy ourselves as thrive. It's another way in which we're different to other animals but not necessarily "better" than them.Extinction can be a problem to atheists who probably believe that they will go on living for eternity through their own offspring. (delusional).
It seems to me that you're the one more concerned about whether we leave anything meaningful behind when we die. Why is passing things on via our offspring any better or worse a concept than passing things on via an afterlife?But we theists believe in an afterlife, so we couldn't care less that there are no humans left on Earth, because the afterlife is what matters.
One could try to convince a lion to become a vegetarian. But he can't understand our language, I guess.Plenty of other animals think to greater or lesser extent. We can't know exactly how well (or indeed how differently) they think, but there is plenty of evidence to suggest some animals are much smarter than we've traditionally given them credit for. Also, loads of animals can do all sorts of things we can't. Having unique characteristics doesn't render any animal "above" or "outside" the overall animal kingdom. Our creative intelligence allows us to think we're better than all other animals (often that we're better than other humans too, hence war), but that doesn't make it true.
We don't have a survival instinct as animals do...since so many people give their life to save those whom they love.And humans have survival instincts (if we didn't, we wouldn't survive). Because we are animals.
Animals don't use contraception when they have sex.That wasn't the point of mentioning extinction. The point was that for all of our "superior" intelligence and technology, we're as likely to destroy ourselves as thrive. It's another way in which we're different to other animals but not necessarily "better" than them.
Yes. Humans are the ultimate apex predator.We are still 100% animals. The scariest animal on the planet actually
Animals fear humans more than lions as 'super predators'.
A new study, published in Current Biology has reported that humans instill a level of fear in animals that significantly surpasses that of lions and other natural predators. The findings revealed that animals, such as giraffes, leopards, zebras, warthogs and hyenas, were twice as likely to flee, and they abandoned waterholes 40% faster in response to human stimuli than they did when encountering lions, or even hunting sounds such as gunshots and barking dogs.
That has literally nothing to do with what I posted and doesn't support your position. Is it that you failed to understand my point or did you understand it but have nothing relevant to challenge it?One could try to convince a lion to become a vegetarian. But he can't understand our language, I guess.
And even if he did, he wouldn't be smart enough to understand the benefits of a vegetarian diet.
So do many other animals, especially parents protecting their young. Regardless, that doesn't entirely eliminate individual survival instinct. Both characteristics are a function of wider species survival. Species with individuals whose instincts mean they survive to bare young and protect their young to survive in turn are the species which continue to exist. Species who don't have those characteristics generally wont survive.We don't have a survival instinct as animals do...since so many people give their life to save those whom they love.
No, because it's still factually wrong. The species homo sapiens, and therefore all individual human beings, full meet the formal definition of "animal". You can say we're special animals, unique animals or the "best" animals, but you can't say we're not animals at all.Let's say that some have evolved from the animal stage and some haven't. That's better.
To an extent, though I'd suggest that is more a function of society than biological evolution. Yet again though, I'm still not saying humans don't have some unique characteristics. That still doesn't mean we're not animals.The fact here is that humans have evolved so much, that they idealize sex, in a way that transcends pure lust.
Trump still poses a huge war mongering risk.@Revoltingest
You asked me a question about Trump.
Trump has never started any war in his four years of presidency. .
It’s different for this reason.I mean...in the Nineteenth Century a great man called Charles Darwin explained that humans were animals, in ancient times. Animals that evolved into something more intelligent and sophisticated that can think and than can use the word, instead of violence.
Au contraire, yesterday I was watching a documentary about the savanna... animals fighting against one another and killing each other for defending their territory.
War is an animal notion. It's everywhere in the animal world.
The fact that wars still exist and that people still fabricate weapons demonstrate that we are not any different than them...we wage wars among different species and among similar species.
So I was asking: why do people (assuming people have evolved from the animal stage) call themselves human but still fabricate weapons that they use to wage wars?
Thank you in advance.
Does it mean that men have become worse than animals?It’s different for this reason.
Animals fight because they have to, humans fight because they want to.
Don’t know.Does it mean that men have become worse than animals?
I advise you to watch this movie Entrusted.Don’t know.
That is a dangerous way to think though.I advise you to watch this movie Entrusted.
It shows that several Germans, Italians and French people saved so many Jews from extermination. They gave their life.
It shows that some humans have evolved from the animal stage. Others are still animals.
The fact that wars still exist and that people still fabricate weapons demonstrate that we are not any different than them...we wage wars among different species and among similar species.
So I was asking: why do people (assuming people have evolved from the animal stage) call themselves human but still fabricate weapons that they use to wage wars?
This is more about philosophy, not biology.I do not understand the above "given {A} why {B}" formulation. How is it any different than:
Homo sapiens have two eyes just like toads, so why do homo sapiens call themselves homo sapiens?
I don't think so.That is a dangerous way to think though.
The Nazis used to kill their own peers too. Fellow Germans. Nazis were assassins, period.The Nazis believed some people were still animals also.
So I was asking: why do people (assuming people have evolved from the animal stage) call themselves human but still fabricate weapons that they use to wage wars?
Why not both? Why do you feel the need to distinguish humans from (other) animals to recognise and acknowledge our unique characteristics?Philosophically and theologically speaking (evolution has also philosophical implications), is man an animal? Or is he something else, more sophisticated?
But not to the same extent or in the same way as humans. Christianity presents animals as something put on Earth for humans, to be dominated and used. Would you be context if you were only "respected" by other people to the same extent as a farm animal or pet?Because I have my Christian faith that tells me that every living being must be respected. Even animals.
I am speaking of philosophy and theology, here.But not to the same extent or in the same way as humans. Christianity presents animals as something put on Earth for humans, to be dominated and used. Would you be context if you were only "respected" by other people to the same extent as a farm animal or pet?