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www.telegraph.co.uk...
A monkey appeared to cry out in worry after her son collapsed.
However, her stress was unwarranted; the baby monkey had just tripped over and was soon back up on its feet.
The mother was photographed in Jabalphur, India, by 31-year-old Avinash Lodhi.
"This moment is rare, especially with animals."
Lastly, I don't care what scientists say, my dog has definite emotions.
originally posted by: TobyFlenderson
a reply to: seasonal
Years ago I saw a documentary about a clan of chimpanzees. One mother's child died very young. She continued to carry the child around, attempted to feed it. The other chimps just gave her her space. Eventually she accepted the reality and wailed. It was heartbreaking.
I've also heard that when African elephants travel past the remains of a former member, each member of the clan will stop and physically touch the bones, one by one, as they pass. Quite remarkable.
Lastly, I don't care what scientists say, my dog has definite emotions.
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: TobyFlenderson
Lastly, I don't care what scientists say, my dog has definite emotions.
Dog owners, 'Pet people' agree with that.
Some own a family pet like they own a piece of furniture. Treat it that way and it becomes the furniture.
Treat them with kindness, love and respect and they return that too. Its not people vs. animal emotions, the feelings of love, play and contentment are universal, we just have different ways of showing it.
originally posted by: seasonal
Is this assigning human emotions to a wild animal? Or did this monkey loose it's sh when it saw it's offspring collapse. It seems like the more we study animals the more we see they are not just "dumb" as they seem.
www.telegraph.co.uk...
A monkey appeared to cry out in worry after her son collapsed.
However, her stress was unwarranted; the baby monkey had just tripped over and was soon back up on its feet.
The mother was photographed in Jabalphur, India, by 31-year-old Avinash Lodhi.
The photographer has never seen anything like this in her career.
"This moment is rare, especially with animals."
originally posted by: Butterfinger
So the son was Ok?
Just another helicopter mom. I bet she spit on a leaf and tried to clean his face off.
"Mah baby!!!!!"
I think scientists are pretty much agreed that dogs have extremely high emotional intelligence.
originally posted by: TobyFlenderson
a reply to: seasonal
Years ago I saw a documentary about a clan of chimpanzees. One mother's child died very young. She continued to carry the child around, attempted to feed it. The other chimps just gave her her space. Eventually she accepted the reality and wailed. It was heartbreaking.
I've also heard that when African elephants travel past the remains of a former member, each member of the clan will stop and physically touch the bones, one by one, as they pass. Quite remarkable.
Lastly, I don't care what scientists say, my dog has definite emotions.
That's a really neat display of empathy!
originally posted by: research100
a reply to: filthyphilanthropist
many years ago when I was a kid we had a dog...and a horse...one day the horse stepped on my sisters foot...not broken but she walked with a limp for a couple of weeks...our dog... when she would walk with my sister she limped, but she walked normal with the rest of us during that time period!!