
Regards Gruditch
Interesting. Are the Orca really cruel; wilfully causing pain or distress for it's own sake? This is interesting because the BBC have long been criticized for showing animals 'behaving cruelly' during wildlife documentaries, such as lingering shots of a lioness taking down an infant wildebeast.David M wrote:the way those Killer Whales
skittled that seal into the water was both cruel and awe-inspiring
I suppose it was cruel from the seal's point of view, Piers, but nature can often be brutal and I really don't see why any broadcaster should feel compelled to sanitise it just because a certain proportion of the UK population has gone soft over the past generation.Piers wrote:Interesting. Are the Orca really cruel; wilfully causing pain or distress for it's own sake? This is interesting because the BBC have long been criticized for showing animals 'behaving cruelly' during wildlife documentaries, such as lingering shots of a lioness taking down an infant wildebeast.David M wrote:the way those Killer Whales
skittled that seal into the water was both cruel and awe-inspiring
Discuss...
They can. Domestic cats do it on a regular basis.Susie wrote:I don't see why animals can't be cruel and kill for the fun of it just as some people can.
It's hard to say. Perhaps we're looking at a behavioural trait that doesn't truly exist in the wild, and can only be witnessed under semi-domestication.Piers wrote:Do domestic cats actually kill as a leisure pursuit? or is it instinctive for the animal to attack and kill a young blue tit (for example)? The more practise the predator gets, the more likely it is to succeed when survival depends upon it and food is scarce.
I don't see why a cat shouldn't kill as a leisure pursuit. If endorphins are released when it kills, and such release gives it pleasure, wouldn't it be killing for pleasure and a side benefit would be the practical skills it acquired (or vice versa)?Piers wrote:Do domestic cats actually kill as a leisure pursuit? or is it instinctive for the animal to attack and kill a young blue tit (for example)? The more practise the predator gets, the more likely it is to succeed when survival depends upon it and food is scarce.
Fascinating. There's no secret why you're such a good teacher, Guy, because you make learning funpadfield wrote:In many more behaviourally advanced species, play seems to have evolved as a way of perfecting (while juvenile) or maintaining (while adult) skills. Taking pleasure in what is essentially work is an enormous evolutionary advantage.
It is no coincidence that the Latin word ludus means both 'game' and 'school', nor that the Greek word 'schole', which lies at the root of the English word 'school', means 'lesiure'!!
A lot of teachers could learn from this...
Guy
I learnt more about teaching from educating my dog than from any number of educational publications. Dogs, like children, learn most effectively from playful conditioning, reinforced by reward (and to a more limited extent, punishment, though as a vet explained to me when I asked for advice about training, a dog should come to you when you call because it wants to, not because it is frightened of the consequences of not coming).Susie wrote:I've seen lots of discussions on the web which explain why people and other mammals are not the same but I still believe that we are not so dissimilar and that the majority of our basic instincts and emotions are the same.
Quite right: Reward is used to encourage, chastisement to deter. You can't train a dog to respond to a positive command through chastising it..!padfield wrote:a dog should come to you when you call because it wants to, not because it is frightened of the consequences of not coming
I know what it is and can't wait to see it, I'll say no more either.ChrisC wrote:no butterflies but not devoid of lepidoptera. i'm not going to spoil it as i believe they are doing a piece on it. or at least i hope they are. an amazing insect coming up.
Chris
Me neither, the point of programmes like this, is to show nature as it is, and this is what happens in nature, cruel from seals point of view, but things like this keep a species population in check or else the species may over breed and end up having bad consequences...just look at the human race and see how over population is affecting us.I suppose it was cruel from the seal's point of view, Piers, but nature can often be brutal and I really don't see why any broadcaster should feel compelled to sanitise it just because a certain proportion of the UK population has gone soft over the past generation.
Me too, we are very similar to other mammals, all do the same thing, females produce milk, rear young, many teach their young to survive by how they survive and showing them what they have learned, all things we do, we just do things a little differently. Woman breastfeed their babies (although we can have the choice not to, other mammals need the milk as a baby), parents impart their values on their children so they can grow up right, same as how other mammals teach their young to look after themselves, the only real difference with that is that humans have much other influences to define how they act or feel or grow up whereas mammals only have their group or parent(s) to influence that depending on the species.I've seen lots of discussions on the web which explain why people and other mammals are not the same but I still believe that we are not so dissimilar and that the majority of our basic instincts and emotions are the same. Just one example would be when I had my babies I scent marked them, just as an animal would.