Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Animal intelligence and things that don't exist

I meant to publish this on this blog instead of my other one so sorry to do double duty.

Now when it comes to animals as individuals, no one could be a bigger softie than me. I can't even leave the house without my dog in tow anymore, though I am thinking about trying a different strategy due to the dog hair in my car. I used to hand raise my hamsters. I saved a snake from a certain death at my mom's house by promising to escort it personally to the other side of Oracle Rd. I kicked in forty bucks and cab fare out of the goodness of my own heart.

But seriously animals are total idiots. Horses as case in point. Does anyone know the reason they have to put a horse down if it breaks its leg, even in our day and age. JP3, you are a veterinarian, why don't you tell us?

Just kidding, but sometimes my brother knows so much about things that I wouldn't be surprised.

IT IS BECAUSE HORSES ARE TOO STUPID NOT TO STEP ON THEIR LEG EVEN IF IT IS BROKEN.

You would think they could set the bone and splint it, and in some species including our own (sometimes) that works, but not in horses. They will keep trying to trot around on their broken leg like there's no tomorrow. That is probably why we are able to break them into manual servitude so easily.

Even my beloved bulldog doesn't qualify as smart. I won't fool myself at all on that score.

Today as he shows his increasing heat intolerance he showed that as unable as he is to tolerate the heat he is equally unwilling to stay out of the kitchen, so to speak. Ok it is his favorite room, for more reasons than one.

I tried to get him to stay downstairs because it is SO much cooler down there but he dutifully trotted up and down the stairs every time I went up and down with laundry or dishes or whatever in his continuing search to escape the feelings of insecure attachment he attained in his puppyhood (thanks to luvabulldog, as always). It makes me cringe to think that he spent the first summer of his tender little life outside ALL DAY. At least he got sprayed down with a HOSE afterward. I wonder during the summer whether he would like the hose any more than in the winter. He seems to have a problem now even with his warm bubble bath, so I am pretty sure the hose came in a distant second to how much he liked the mud and filth he had to run around in all day before he came in.

So animal lovers, I am with you. I am infinitely tender toward these creatures, particularly those that I am attached to like those in my care. Including the two legged variety.

But in the cases of those animals with less than you would call human-like sentience, it is not a good idea to anthropomorphize.

EVEN PITA PUTS DOWN THREE QUARTERS OF THE ANIMALS THEY RESCUE!

So as I say, I love animals, just like I love the planet and want to save the world, etc. And I suppose horses have even fewer brains than some of the animals that we have no reservations about eating, like pigs.

But they are not people. And just as any cause to be taken up on a banner or on a bumper sticker, there are complicated issues involved in any moral or philosophical issue like whether a dog is smiling.

And the answer is yes MY dog is smiling, because he knows he has hoodwinked about ten years of manual servitude from me.

(By the way whether there is a smile on a dog is a famous philosophical question, which now falls more into the per view of animal psychology).

2 comments:

JandS Morgan said...

It really frustrates me how many animals have to be put down simply because people can not fix them. I believe there are exceptions to the rule, but the people that really make me mad are the ones that purposefully allow it to happen just so they can continue to have kittens over and over and could care less about the older animals. Baby animals are overrated. That's my rant :)

morganspice said...

I agree. I am so sad that we didn't get Harry when he was a puppy, but we got him and love him for the way he is as an adult. Becuase people that love puppies and kittens but not dogs and cats are a probmem. How much is that doggie in the window? Uh, that puppy is going to weigh fifty pounds and be a mut that I won't take care of... so it shouldn't have been bred. I so wish that Hary hadn't spent his puppyhood roaming in some backyard limping with infections in his paws and danruf and yeast infections untreated when he could have been loved and taken care of. I guess I wouldnt have it any other way because we have him now, but my heart breaks whenever I think of it, and that is probably why I let him sleep in my bed all day.

I do have a worse problem with animals being mistreated than put down. I think that what I said about anthropomorphizing probably indicates that most of the sadness about death is that people mourn them, and so is often humane. I would not have animals bred to be pointlessly put down, but when you can't place an animal and they would suffer, it is I guess the unfortunate lesser evil.

Goes to show though that irresponsible breeding of housepets probably results in almost as much needless death of sentient animals (as opposed to cows or chickens or fish) as death for commercial purposes.