• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Man vs. Beast

bunny1ohio

Active Member
standing_on_one_foot said:
The gorillas? They don't speak American sign language, which is certainly a real language. They know a few words and commands and such...none of the grammar or syntax, which is vital to language, which American sign language does have. Y'need vocabulary and rules for a language to work...I think a lot of it is humans looking for something and seeing what they want to, honestly. The idea of talking animals is just so appealing.

I shall have to look up the bonobos when I get a chance. If they've got some basic rules that would be very neat.

From a website called koko.org which is about the new study of gorillas and sign language and one of it's finest examples...

"Koko has a sign language vocabulary of over 1000 words, which she uses in complex statements and questions. Most of these signs are standard American Sign Language (ASL), but some are either invented or slightly modified by Koko to form what we call Gorilla Sign Langue (GSL), or "Gorilla Speak."

American sign language is her basic form of communication and she is capable of very intelligent communication. She also has created many of her own signs, showing a deeper understanding of the language itself and an ability to modify and create new words (previously thought to be only a human trait).... Grammar and syntax mean a hearing person communicates better than someone who speaks sign? Not so far as I have seen... and again i reitterate 80% of human communication is through body language when face to face... not grammar and syntax. I could say I love you with a snarl and it communicates that I actually don't like you...

And all animal groups have "basic rules" such as the males eat first, the females hunt in case of lions.... or with dogs... there is a leader in the pack and if you don't like it you must prove yourself strong enough to take that leadership role away...We simply don't understand enough about how animals communicate to fully understand the depth of their "language abilities" :)
 

bunny1ohio

Active Member
Booko said:
Yup, they are indeed rapists. They are also necrophiliacs, as was posted in the necrophilia thread, and as I observed just 2 days ago when one of my runner ducks died from complications of avian flu and another duck was having a bit of fun. It's also a matter of dominance sometimes. When I put 2 flocks together, the males attack and/or hump each other to determine, uh, who's on top. :eek:

They call them birdbrains for good reason.

Okay... so sometimes it's for dominance... sometimes we just don't know why lol...

But either way these are still traits that occur in humans as well... I guess what I am looking for is what makes us different... not things that humans have in common with animals... or is there anything that humans do that animals do not? :jiggy:
 

michel

Administrator Emeritus
Staff member
Runt said:
Sometimes I'm not so sure we're better than animals... animals don't destroy the world like we do...

However, we do have some characteristics that make us "better" (in some ways) than animals. Our intelligence, for one, certainly helps us survive, and if we use it correctly, could be used for the benefit of the entire WORLD, rather than just ourselves.

I agree, who says we are better than animals?.....we do !
icon10.gif
I think we need another opinion on this.

Our intelligence, for one, certainly helps us survive,
Yes? Presumably as demonstrated by we British and you Americans over Iraq!

could be used for the benefit of the entire WORLD,

It could be, but would it ? My experience (i guess I am a bit older than you) is that the vast majority of the human race just wants to line their own pockets.
 

bunny1ohio

Active Member
Booko said:
When animals act according to instinct, they are acting in their animal nature, which is fine.

Humans, while they have an animal nature, also have a human nature. For us to act as animals is "unworthy," and it's exactly when we follow our animal nature that the destruction begins.

So what exaclty is human nature?

Booko said:
Animals have no choice about being animals. We do have a choice. We can choose to act like animals, or act according to our human, or spiritual nature. And yes, when we act like animals, then we are indeed the worst of the animal kingdom.

Animals also have a choice of action depending upon circustance and exposure to elements other than their natural environment. A man marooned on an island tends to revert to animalistic behavior to survive... the same as an animal in the wild... you change the circumstances and you change the behavior. A raccoon knows how to forage for food in the wild... but chooses to raid a trash can because it is easier. A dog knows how to hunt down a prey animal in nature, but can be taught to ignore that instinct by a human controller.

Booko said:
To act like the beasts of the field is unworthy of man. Those virtues that befit his dignity are forbearance, mercy, compassion and loving-kindness towards all the peoples and kindreds of the earth."

What actions are those then, since most everything in this thread has pointed to similarities instead of anything that is distinctly "human" in nature. Forebearance... male wolves, lions etc allow their children to attempt to harm them in practice for becoming mature adults and they tolerate it all very well... when it gets out of hand they take control and stop it. Compassion... herd animals especially will adopt the young of other when the mother dies or cannot care for the baby in some way. Loving kindness towards all people and kindreds.... since when? People are just as violent and intolerant as they have ever been... we just have better control of how people act in today's society. People destroy entire species of animals for nothing more than a fuel or a fur coat.

The pathway of nature is the pathway of the animal realm. The animal acts in accordance with the requirements of nature, follows its own instincts and desires. Whatever its impulses and proclivities may be it has the liberty to gratify them; yet it is a captive of nature. It cannot deviate in the least degree from the road nature has established.

Again... animals can learn and can be taught to ignore instinctive action.

The animal possesses no power of ideation or conscious intelligence; it is a captive of the senses and deprived of that which lies beyond them.

Refer to the Koko page I posted... this is just incorrect.

It is subject to what the eye sees, the ear hears, the nostrils sense, the taste detects and touch reveals. These sensations are acceptable and sufficient for the animal.

As are humans... and these things are not always "sufficient" for an animal, but they are much more widely accepted by them because they are more focused on survival and simply living than expanding and becoming "better" than what they naturally are.

But that which is beyond the range of the senses, that realm of phenomena through which the conscious pathway to the kingdom of God leads, the world of spiritual susceptibilities and divine religion, -- of these the animal is completely unaware, for in its highest station it is a captive of nature.

How do we know this? Like I said earlier... if dog's have a god... they ain't talkin... and we don't understand them well enough to know what they think about... that's a presumption created from ignorance... and religion is an invention of men... animals play follow the leader (pack/herd etc) just as humans do (God) and attempt to emulate them in like fashion.

for the animal is absolutely ignorant of the realm of spirit and out of touch with the inner world of conscious realization. The animal would agree with the materialist in denying the existence of that which transcends the senses.

If you believe in ghosts and the supernatural... have you ever seen the way an animal reactes in an evireonment where they are said to occur? They appear much more attuned to it and aware than humans.

the kingdom of God and its traces whereas God has deposited within the human creature an illimitable power by which he can rule the world of nature."

The kingdom of god is a man-made invention to attempt to discover what happens after death... and power is an illusion. A man alone with only the same tools available in nature such as a stick versus a gorilla with the same weapon will lose almost every time.
 

bunny1ohio

Active Member
steelblue75 said:
transspecies....... great im a male dog that quacks like a duck and wears high heels and stockings...... no wonder im confused:help:

*Cheeky grin* I see no heels or stockings in that avatar... maybe that's something you just do in private? LOL

And the whole transspecies thing?... Don't worry about it... I have a gay cross-species rabbit... it like to hump a male cat :eek:
 

Opethian

Active Member
If you believe in ghosts and the supernatural... have you ever seen the way an animal reactes in an evireonment where they are said to occur? They appear much more attuned to it and aware than humans.

Probably because what we perceive as supernatural is something our we are unable to explain, because our senses can't interpret it decently, while a different animal may be more capable to interpret it decently as some of its senses may be better or different than ours, and thus they can interpret the information more correctly than us, and respond better to the situation. See for example dogs who can feel in advance when its boss is going to have an epileptic attack. Something our senses would never be able to perceive.
 

steelblue75

Member
Opethian said:
Probably because what we perceive as supernatural is something our we are unable to explain, because our senses can't interpret it decently, while a different animal may be more capable to interpret it decently as some of its senses may be better or different than ours, and thus they can interpret the information more correctly than us, and respond better to the situation. See for example dogs who can feel in advance when its boss is going to have an epileptic attack. Something our senses would never be able to perceive.

oooo oooooo ive heard of that where a dog can smell canser or smell epilepsy i cant remember where i heard it but from what i understand it is a proven fact they can detect their owner are ill before the owner even k nows
 

mr.guy

crapsack
Booko said:
A sense of humour! :biglaugh:
I understand that neanderthals distinguished themselves by their prevelance of fart jokes; damning evidence that they did in fact interbreed with modern humans.
 

steelblue75

Member
Booko said:
A sense of humour! :biglaugh:

as much as id like to agree with you book....... id have to say even animals have a sense of humour... look at some of the crazy things they do that make us crack up... the question there would be are they doing it knowing it makes us happy.... from my experience with animals i think its possible they do it to make us laugh... how else could i decribe my old cat intentionally ignoring me until i got up from the sofa to get him for knocking over the chair and then glaring at me like it was my fault it fell... now you could say fear drove his actions but you really had to be there... he teased and taunted and stayed just out of reach like he knew it was a game t hen of course there is catnip..... kitty weed! talk about a riot to watch:biglaugh:
 

d.

_______
although my dog is a constant source of amusement in this house, i would think it would be to stretch things a bit to claim she has a sense of humor. she is funny though.
 

Booko

Deviled Hen
steelblue75 said:
as much as id like to agree with you book....... id have to say even animals have a sense of humour... look at some of the crazy things they do that make us crack up... the question there would be are they doing it knowing it makes us happy.... from my experience with animals i think its possible they do it to make us laugh... how else could i decribe my old cat intentionally ignoring me until i got up from the sofa to get him for knocking over the chair and then glaring at me like it was my fault it fell... now you could say fear drove his actions but you really had to be there... he teased and taunted and stayed just out of reach like he knew it was a game t hen of course there is catnip..... kitty weed! talk about a riot to watch:biglaugh:

Oh, I'd never maintain that animals can't have fun. Whether they can tell jokes is another matter. Since I don't speak cat, I really have no idea, nor can I probably be sure about it. I'm not so sure that animals do things to "amuse others" though. I do think they can have fun, that much seems obvious.

Cats to a lot of things out of sheer ritual, though. I have one cat who licks my eyeball every morning when she decides it's time I get out of bed. I had one once who thought that in order to be fed in the morning, he had to preceed me down the stairs and attempt to trip me. Another one came to the call of the can opener. And there was the cat who thought every time I opened a refrigerator door, he simply MUST attempt to get his head shut in the door, because good things always came from that somehow.

It can be a mistake to assume that because animals do something, it's because they reasoned out it was the best course of action.

It can also be a mistake to assume that animals are so far beneath us they are incapable of significant thought or feelings.
 
  • Like
Reactions: d.

Booko

Deviled Hen
bunny1ohio said:
Okay... so sometimes it's for dominance... sometimes we just don't know why lol...

But either way these are still traits that occur in humans as well... I guess what I am looking for is what makes us different... not things that humans have in common with animals... or is there anything that humans do that animals do not? :jiggy:

Ok, here's a list of possible things that humans do or have that animals do not. Please note that in at least some of the possibilities, it's not that animals do nothing of the sort, but more like we do it so much more it becomes visibly different. (As in, a difference in in degree is a difference in kind.)

Build things

Overcome our natural abilities (we are land animals, but we have mastered the air, the seas, and space)

Rational thought

Plan for the future

Remember history

Progress rapidly over time compared w/animals, and due to our own choices and not just environmental pressures.

Believe in/have a concept of the supernatural or something much larger than ourselves.

Well, that's a start anyway.
 

steelblue75

Member
Booko said:
Oh, I'd never maintain that animals can't have fun. Whether they can tell jokes is another matter. Since I don't speak cat, I really have no idea, nor can I probably be sure about it. I'm not so sure that animals do things to "amuse others" though. I do think they can have fun, that much seems obvious.

Cats to a lot of things out of sheer ritual, though. I have one cat who licks my eyeball every morning when she decides it's time I get out of bed. I had one once who thought that in order to be fed in the morning, he had to preceed me down the stairs and attempt to trip me. Another one came to the call of the can opener. And there was the cat who thought every time I opened a refrigerator door, he simply MUST attempt to get his head shut in the door, because good things always came from that somehow.

It can be a mistake to assume that because animals do something, it's because they reasoned out it was the best course of action.

It can also be a mistake to assume that animals are so far beneath us they are incapable of significant thought or feelings.

see that post right there is the reason i hate to disagree with you... now i have absolutely nothing to comment on because i agree with you.... what are you? ghandi reincarnated?:bow: how am i supposed to debate you if i agree?:149:
 

Booko

Deviled Hen
bunny1ohio said:
So what exaclty is human nature?
Uh, would you like that in 25 words or less??

Animals also have a choice of action depending upon circustance and exposure to elements other than their natural environment. A man marooned on an island tends to revert to animalistic behavior to survive... the same as an animal in the wild... you change the circumstances and you change the behavior. A raccoon knows how to forage for food in the wild... but chooses to raid a trash can because it is easier. A dog knows how to hunt down a prey animal in nature, but can be taught to ignore that instinct by a human controller.
And you just listed another difference I had forgotten...ever seen a dog try to tame or control another animal? Humans do this to animals all the time, for better or for worse. We have the ability to dominate and control other species that animals seem not to have. Hm, maybe the author of that story in Genesis had a point I didn't consider.

What actions are those then, since most everything in this thread has pointed to similarities instead of anything that is distinctly "human" in nature. Forebearance... male wolves, lions etc allow their children to attempt to harm them in practice for becoming mature adults and they tolerate it all very well... when it gets out of hand they take control and stop it.
Do they ever show forebearance to other species? Do they show forebearance to wolves that are not members of their pack?

Compassion... herd animals especially will adopt the young of other when the mother dies or cannot care for the baby in some way.
If herd animals find out that another species is short of food, will they drop a little spare around so they can eat? We feed birds all the time, and other species as well, if we know they need some extra support, and not just out of our selfish interests either.

Loving kindness towards all people and kindreds.... since when? People are just as violent and intolerant as they have ever been... we just have better control of how people act in today's society. People destroy entire species of animals for nothing more than a fuel or a fur coat.
That is a function of our fall into excessive greed and materialism, and is not a universal human trait. It's exactly what happens when we act according to our "animal nature" which is to say, only out of concern for our own species and not any wider concerns. I submit that when we act according to our "human nature" we are seen to be greater than animals, because we are capable of doing things to support the entire biosphere and not just ourselves. We *can* be caretakers, if we choose to be. Animals cannot. They act to support their immediate family group and to a very small extent, their species. They do not concern themselves with the well-being of other animal species.

Again... animals can learn and can be taught to ignore instinctive action.
Of course they can. If they had no way to adapt, many of the species would be extinct. This does not mean that they, for no external reason, spontaneously decide to try something new. Unless, of course, you want to assert the example of Harold the Flying Sheep. :) And that little skit is funny *precisely because* we recognize that sheep just don't have the imagination or interest in trying to fly. They are land animals and have no knowledge that there is even another possibility, much less any drive to achieve it.


Refer to the Koko page I posted... this is just incorrect.

I've known about Koko for years. It's a fascinating story, and well worth considering, for it reveals that primates at any rate are more capable than we once thought. I think that's important because if we underestimate animals, we can end up devaluing them and so doing them harm. I would still argue that this is an issue where a matter of degree becomes a difference in kind. No matter how hard Koko tries, she will always think like a toddler at best. No matter now many Kokos we teach ASL, they will not learn to build buildings or fly planes. Planet of the Apes is a nice bit of fiction, but it is fiction.

As are humans... and these things are not always "sufficient" for an animal, but they are much more widely accepted by them because they are more focused on survival and simply living than expanding and becoming "better" than what they naturally are.
Which rather goes to demonstrate my point, I think.

Why is it that animals do not strive to be "better" and we do? Could it be that they don't even *think* in terms of "good" and "bad" and "better"?

How do we know this? Like I said earlier... if dog's have a god... they ain't talkin... and we don't understand them well enough to know what they think about... that's a presumption created from ignorance... and religion is an invention of men... animals play follow the leader (pack/herd etc) just as humans do (God) and attempt to emulate them in like fashion.
It is a presumption based on thousands of years of observation, which should not be swept under the rug so lightly.

If you believe in ghosts and the supernatural... have you ever seen the way an animal reactes in an evireonment where they are said to occur? They appear much more attuned to it and aware than humans.
I do not define "supernatural" in terms of "ghosts." I don't believe in ghosts. Animals often respond to stimuli that humans do not, I expect because they don't have that nasty forebrain that keeps sending them distracting signals. They don't try to override their senses like we do. Which, uh, kind of goes to support yet another assertion I made that animals live in their sense, but we do more than that.

I'm sure you've seen a dog that really didn't like a person? And do you, like me, trust the dog's opinion more than your own? And then there are the usual stories about animals that sense earthquakes before humans do, and the elephants in Sri Lanka who tried to round up people and herd them into the hills before the tsunami hit. Animals don't waste time rationalizing -- they *act*. This can be a good thing in many cases, but not always.

The kingdom of god is a man-made invention to attempt to discover what happens after death... and power is an illusion. A man alone with only the same tools available in nature such as a stick versus a gorilla with the same weapon will lose almost every time.
Hm. The kingdom of God you don't believe in, I don't believe in either.

Your point about a man in nature alone is easily contradicted by any experienced hunter. The fact that we have so few left in our industrialized society doesn't change the ability of a trained hunter to outwit a gorilla. Ever hear of snares?
 

steelblue75

Member
Crusher777 said:
The difference in man and animals is hat we are created in the image of God. We have souls; animals do not.


ok for one we cant even prove we have souls let alone animals and for two the thread was started asking what makes us different not what the bible says makes us different... a real reason not a biblical verse that can be seen as unfounded if someone doesnt believe in the religion you are quoting
 
Top