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A thought for all things alive.

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Lord Percy
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PostPosted: 18:09 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: A thought for all things alive. Reply with quote

3am here so please make allowance for the random banter I'm about to spew.

I just caught a mosquito between my first two fingers, chopstick style, as if I were the karate kid. It fell to the floor, and there was a little black outline of a mosquito shape on my index finger. Anyway it's not dead. I just crippled its wings and a couple of its legs so it can't go anywhere. It's totally motionless, but when I gently pick it up, it starts moving its legs and wobbling fruitlessly.

So now it's just there, immobile and mortally wounded.

What's it thinking? Clearly has less sentience than a human, but it still has sensory inputs, including eyes of some sort, and will have that urge to survive, as all animals do.

It will die tonight. I just wonder what it will feel as it drifts out of existence.
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.....
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PostPosted: 18:12 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Finish the bugger off then worry about it.
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alexknight200...
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PostPosted: 18:39 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: fly dead Reply with quote

Its most probably thinking that this is what it is like to be squashed between two great big artic lorries??

Hope this helps. Cool
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The Shaggy D.A.
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PostPosted: 20:14 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Mosquitoes kill more humans than any other animal. Death is too good for them.
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Flip
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PostPosted: 20:20 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Re: A thought for all things alive. Reply with quote

Lord Percy wrote:



What's it thinking?


According to my old biology teacher. Nothing. It reacts in instinct, not thought.
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Sako
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PostPosted: 20:24 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I used to feel like that when I watched my victims take their last breath, my hands tight around their throats, don't know what they were thinking, but I'd usually get a hard-on.
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Ariel Badger
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PostPosted: 20:32 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

SMIDSY?
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Howling TerrorOutOfOffice
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PostPosted: 20:34 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ariel Badger wrote:
SMIDSY?
Sorry Mate I Did Splat You.
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andys675
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PostPosted: 20:59 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

fly, eat, fuck, repeat
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 21:17 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Re: A thought for all things alive. Reply with quote

Its thinking: Fuckin twat, if he can't kill me in one go, he should still be doing "Wax On Wax Off"
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Derivative
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PostPosted: 21:19 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't think insects are sentient. So, nothing.

I've had this argument a few times, actually. Pain in animals.

If you hurt a dog then it will wince. It'll try to get away. So there is a reflexive reaction. But unless it consciously feels the pain there exists no suffering.

I think most would agree that dogs clearly do feel pain. They're intelligent animals.

But does a rabbit? A hamster? A hummingbird? A bumblebee?

Somewhere along the line there's a transition - the sentient knowledge of pain ('feeling' pain) disappears and only the reflexive action remains.

And it's very difficult to draw the line and say 'right, these animals do feel pain, these animals don't'. There are legal boundaries in the UK pertaining to this and it's difficult to really say how accurate they are.
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angryjonny
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PostPosted: 21:20 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

andys675 wrote:
fly, eat, fuck, repeat

You're quite the poet.
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covent.gardens
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PostPosted: 21:52 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

I saw a beetle the other day that was on its back. I kept righting him and he would immediately flip on his back again. He had some bad legs on one side but he wasn't clever enough to think "Some of my legs are fucked up on one side. If I walk slowly I'll be able to move, but if I try and scuttle away like a mad beetle, I will only flip over again".

Just seemed to know one thing - run.

On the other hand, they can't be that stupid because they must recognise what another beetle looks like to breed, and get food etc. But then again, a plant does those things too, and they're pretty stupid.

So I dunno.

Ps. I mercy killed the beetle.
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Skudd
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PostPosted: 22:02 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sako wrote:
I used to feel like that when I watched my victims take their last breath, my hands tight around their throats, don't know what they were thinking, but I'd usually get a hard-on.


They don't half leak afterwards though.
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angryjonny
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PostPosted: 22:04 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Flies keep flying at the window. For hours, if you let them. There's no intelligence in there.
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Skudd
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PostPosted: 22:36 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

angryjonny wrote:
Flies keep flying at the window. For hours, if you let them. There's no intelligence in there.


They just want to get to the bodies.
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Sako
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PostPosted: 22:46 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Skudd wrote:


They just want to get to the bodies.


It's the semen plastered across the bodies they really want.
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GhostRider
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PostPosted: 23:05 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Derivative wrote:
I don't think insects are sentient. So, nothing.

I've had this argument a few times, actually. Pain in animals.

If you hurt a dog then it will wince. It'll try to get away. So there is a reflexive reaction. But unless it consciously feels the pain there exists no suffering.

I think most would agree that dogs clearly do feel pain. They're intelligent animals.

But does a rabbit? A hamster? A hummingbird? A bumblebee?

Somewhere along the line there's a transition - the sentient knowledge of pain ('feeling' pain) disappears and only the reflexive action remains.

And it's very difficult to draw the line and say 'right, these animals do feel pain, these animals don't'. There are legal boundaries in the UK pertaining to this and it's difficult to really say how accurate they are.


Based on what analysis? Visual appearance of distress? Kinda hard to determine the facial expression of a spider.

Thinking abiut the function of pain, isnt it itself a reflexive action telling the brain that trauma is occuring in a particular area, thus a beetle shying away when you chop a leg off by that definition would be experiencing pain, if it continues to live afgerwards it will likely remain in pain and thus I would define that as suffering.

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GhostRider
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PostPosted: 23:13 - 02 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

angryjonny wrote:
Flies keep flying at the window. For hours, if you let them. There's no intelligence in there.


So because flies arent aware of the concept of windows, they are not intelligent?

Spend a day "stealing" a 4yr olds nose and they will believe its truly being taken away from it, but the kid isnt thick.

I wonder if a fly had a lifespan of a year if would grasp the concept of windows ....

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Lord Percy
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PostPosted: 03:00 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Laughing

I was hoping the thread would take a more philosophical line of thought.

Regarding the concept of suffering - Interesting and true Karma .

I agree with Derivative on the argument of how to define it - at what point does it go from stressful pain that imprints on the brain and has a lasting psychological effect, to the opposite end where the pain is just a cognitive response that's immediately forgotten once the moment has passed.

However I also agree with ghostrider that a lot can be considered as suffering, it just depends on definition and opinion. Not really connected, but leading on from the point that a fly may know a window if it has the time to learn; Fully grown elephants can be tethered to a single short stake in the ground and they won't try to escape because they think they can't, as they've been held that way since they were babies. Conditioning of the mind - if somebody has to endure a very painful event, they may be traumatised for some time, but if a human is subjected to that same event every day from the moment they're born, the 'injury' sensation may still be the same but it won't trauma them as they're conditioned to the process. So who does it hurt more?

I remember on the last post wins thread, someone put up a vid of a snapping turtle pulling a live mouse totally in half, which then wriggled free and tried to swim to the surface with it's guts trailing out behind from it's chest cavity. It was horrific, but I concluded it was more painful for the observer than it was for the mouse, because we perceived the event with our minds in full trauma mode, rather than having lived it in reality. It probably wasn't painful because of the adrenaline and quickness of the moment. And furthermore, if the mouse were suddenly knocked out and then stitched back together and woke up in a month fully healed, how would its mind interpret the suffering? Just a vague, blurred memory?

And what of a human who undergoes major surgery with a general anaesthetic so they're asleep for the whole thing? It's just as much of a major physical trauma, but they don't experience it.

If you look at a bad injury through reverse binoculars, the sensation of pain reduces because the injury looks smaller.

So is pain real, or is it the sum of our emotional perception of the event?

As far as the mosquito goes, I'm pretty sure it doesn't have the memory system humans have, otherwise in the 30 million year existence of its species they'd have formed mini civilisations by now, but they haven't, so their nervous system doesn't go any further than dealing with raw short-term inputs and outputs.

Anyway I think I used a bad word in the OP. When I said, "What does it feel?", I didn't really mean its pain or emotions, I just meant its senses. In its last moments, did the mosquito's life just fade to black?

What are the final sensations of a non-sentient being as it shuts down?
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 04:11 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sako wrote:
I used to feel like that when I watched my victims take their last breath, my hands tight around their throats, don't know what they were thinking, but I'd usually get a hard-on.


Ugh I hate when that happens.
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Lord Percy
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PostPosted: 04:21 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

The Shaggy D.A. wrote:
Mosquitoes kill more humans than any other animal. Death is too good for them.


What of the mosquito who never kills anyone?

The death of that mosquito is the same as your own death being celebrated because 'Hitler'.

Which I guess makes one think about how every human is quite complicit in the failures of their own species.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 05:41 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nurse - take this one back to the day-room please! Oh and change his catheter - I think his toxins have built up again. Mr. Green
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Derivative
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PostPosted: 05:41 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

GhostRider wrote:
Based on what analysis? Visual appearance of distress? Kinda hard to determine the facial expression of a spider


Anthropomorphic bias I suppose. I really can't say that there is a proper way. There's no actual way of me knowing that you feel pain and that it isn't just me.

Visual appearance of distress is exactly what I'm talking about as not being a reliable indicator.

The example I use is being asleep.

If I bash you in the knee while asleep, and you pull away and make a grimaced face, but don't wake up, then there is no real suffering (if you're not bruised in the morning).

The reflexive action of simply moving away, and the fact that nerve endings exist, in my view are not sufficient.

Quote:
Thinking abiut the function of pain, isnt it itself a reflexive action telling the brain that trauma is occuring in a particular area


There is a delineation between pain existing, and being able to feel that pain.

The former is just, well, it's an impulse. It's like if your arm always felt warm or your leg always cold (but not uncomfortably so). Who cares?

But if it's actually unpleasant rather than just being a signal, which I'd argue requires a level of consciousness, sentience, whatever you want to call it, then it's truly being felt.
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Hetzer
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PostPosted: 09:04 - 03 Aug 2013    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's my belief that non-sapient creatures are unable to 'suffer'. Suffering requires the ability to self-reflect and know the pain both internally and externally.

No dog or cat I've ever seen or heard of has lamented the loss of a limb, they go on with their lives as if completely unaware of the loss. A human would be traumatised for life, to some greater or lesser degree (mild regret to full-on woe).
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