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Originally posted by BluByWho
Hunting would not be considered future planning. Hunting would be considered a response to being hungry. No animal is going to hunt just to hunt, animals hunt to eat.
Animals don't hunt to supply future meals, they hunt to fill thier currently empty stomachs. That's why a happy dog is a dog who must work for his food bowl, rather than just plopping it down once or twice a day.
Originally posted by BluByWho
What does a memory of a past winter and a learned behavior have to do with the concept of time?
Originally posted by BluByWho
I repeat: Memory does not = Time
Originally posted by BluByWho
Also please remember I am talking about DOGS. I do not have experience with other animals.
Originally posted by BluByWho
You start at the need for an animal to entertain itself and then draw the conclusion it must be to pass time, where is the evidence to back that up? How do you arrive at that conclusion.
Originally posted by BluByWho
Prey drive is a natural instinct in all animals, the thrill of the chase may be what the cat is after rather than a meal, especially if its a domesticated cat that is fed well.
Originally posted by BluByWho
In no way does that indicate the cat is hunting to pass time, if it was what would the cat do, give himeslf 20 minutes of chase time then quit?
Just because an animal partakes in leisurly activities does not mean it is doing those activities to pass time. Even if it IS doing these activities to pass time, how would it know how much time it should pass or how long to partake in the activity for? If thats a conclusion you wish to draw, lets explain how you got there.
TIME is something humans created.
Originally posted by BluByWho
And if my dogs had a concept of time why wouldn't they come to me and beg on their birthdays when they get fed raw steak?
Originally posted by stumason
Er, you said it yourself:
"memory of a past winter". If you had no concept of time, the idea of a past would be unknown to you.
But, conversely, memory can also = time. A good analogy to explain this concept would be:
A bee is black and yellow, but not everything that is black and yellow is a bee.
Memory = Time and memory does not = Time are both true statements, but do not help your argument because they are both true.
Thats a shame as this thread was about Animals, not just Dogs.
When you do something that is not necessary to your survival, ie: Hunt for the sake of it, then it has to be for another reason. Just attributing down to "instinct" is a cop out. If it was instinct, then they would also eat their prey, as they would in the wild.
Even if my Cat hasn't eaten her food all morning, she will still not eat what she has caught. She will leave it and return to her bowl to chow down on her biscuits.
She is also very particular about what she eats. there are certain cat foods she will not touch, even if they are "premium" brands and made from the choicest ingredients, because she does not like the flavour.
If Cats, or any other animal, was purely driven by instinct, she would eat whatever was put in front of her when she is hungry. This is not the case.
Lions in the wild will sit and bask in the midday sun, while their young play. Sometimes the adults might join in, sometimes they don't want to and wish to carry on sunbathing, as it is more enjoyable for them to do so. They will even shoo away the annoying young so they can continue in their lazy basking.
Many animals will either have sex or stimulate themselves purely for fun also.
Your confusing two separate concepts there. The ability to know that some time has passed is entirely different to be able to measure and quantify that time, as that would require a basic understand of numeracy, which I am pretty sure most animals do not have.
TIME is something humans created.
Originally posted by BluByWho
And if my dogs had a concept of time why wouldn't they come to me and beg on their birthdays when they get fed raw steak?
Again, a dog might know that it hasn't seen anyone in a long while, yet is unable to tell you how long because it CANNOT COUNT nor is it able to READ A CLOCK OR CALENDAR. Your confusing the ability to understand passage of time with the ability to measure time.
Animals can get lonely and depressed. If they had no concept of the passage of time, how could they possibly get lonely?
They wouldn't know how long they had been alone, so as such, wouldn't get to upset about not seeing anyone for a while.
How can you recognize something you can't measure or quantify?
Originally posted by grover
Are you sure the article said animals as opposed to Americans???
Originally posted by BluByWho
Nor has the small child been taught what time is, therefore has no clue as to what it is that is passing by. The child is aware of his own conciousness and being, and aware that he/she remembers things that have happened in the past, and can contemplate the future. We're talking about animals.
Originally posted by BluByWho
How does one "experience time"?
Originally posted by BluByWho
My arguement is not that an animal can or cant read a clock. My arguement is animals are stuck in time with little idea of past or future. They have no capacity to put the past into a timeline and do not contemplate the future. They live in the moment, aware of the conciousness of their being at that moment in time.
Originally posted by BluByWho
If a tree falls in the forest and nothing is around to hear it does it make a sound?
Originally posted by BluByWho
Would time exist if humans were never around to contemplate it? Define time according to your arguement.
Originally posted by BluByWho
Care to define the time your talking about? I have already posted the dictionary definition of time.
1 a: the measured or measurable period during which an action, process, or condition exists or continues : duration b: a nonspatial continuum that is measured in terms of events which succeed one another from past through present to future
Huh? My 4 year old daughter and my 4 year old Step-son are, currently, not capable of reading a clock or telling you how long a given amount of time has passed, yet they can certainly tell that time has passed. I wonder if you have children, because stating what you said above is utter rubbish.
What are humans if not animals? You're assuming a huge gap in ability between all animals and humans, which is quite arrogant. Whales, Dolphins, Apes and monkeys are comparable (to an extent) in cognitive abilities with humans. The only thing that sets us apart from them is the discovery of fire, which to be honest, would be pretty hard for a Whale to discover, even if they had the intellectual faculties.
1 a: the measured or measurable period during which an action, process, or condition exists or continues : duration b: a nonspatial continuum that is measured in terms of events which succeed one another from past through present to future