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Re: My snake loves it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by zhang317
How can so many people vote that snakes have no emotions?
Is stress not an emotion?
No.
D-i-c-t-i-o-n-a-r-y
:twocents:
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Re: My snake loves it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by littleindiangirl
No.
D-i-c-t-i-o-n-a-r-y
:twocents:
Oxford English Dictionary:
emotion
• noun 1 a strong feeling, such as joy or anger. 2 instinctive feeling as distinguished from reasoning or knowledge.
Is stress a strong feeling, along the lines of joy or anger? Yes.
Is stress a instinctive feeling as distinguished from reasoning or knowledge? In the case of a Ball Python, stress is a instinctive feeling as distinguished from reason. Such reasons may be due inadequate husbandry or housing. So yes.
Therefore: Stress is an emotion according to the definition of the Oxford English Dictionary.
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Re: My snake loves it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by zhang317
Oxford English Dictionary:
emotion
• noun 1 a strong feeling, such as joy or anger. 2 instinctive feeling as distinguished from reasoning or knowledge.
Is stress a strong feeling, along the lines of joy or anger? Yes.
Is stress a instinctive feeling as distinguished from reasoning or knowledge? In the case of a Ball Python, stress is a instinctive feeling as distinguished from reason. Such reasons may be due inadequate husbandry or housing. So yes.
Therefore: Stress is an emotion according to the definition of the Oxford English Dictionary.
Haha, nice one there only posting half of the accepted definition for stress. Now go back and read the unabridged version and post it. :gj:
EDIT:
I feel I should clarify a little, to avoid further confusion. When people discuss "stress" in regards to BP's, they are often using it as a general term for "distress"; as opposed to eustress. So I would start your search there. ;)
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Re: My snake loves it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by littleindiangirl
Haha, nice one there only posting half of the accepted definition for stress. Now go back and read the unabridged version and post it. :gj:
EDIT:
I feel I should clarify a little, to avoid further confusion. When people discuss "stress" in regards to BP's, they are often using it as a general term for "distress"; as opposed to eustress. So I would start your search there. ;)
you win!
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Re: My snake loves it.
of course they have emotions, anger is an emotion and i've had a angry snake on my hands before!! yesterday i put a rat in for dinner with my boa, he was about to shed and didnt want nothing to do with the rat, the rat put its paw on him and he went crazy!! puffing up and hissing like mad, even after i took the rat out he was pissed for about 10 mins, i don't know about you but a boa's hiss is creepy to the core for some reason to me
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Re: My snake loves it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jeffjr464
of course they have emotions, anger is an emotion and i've had a angry snake on my hands before!! yesterday i put a rat in for dinner with my boa, he was about to shed and didnt want nothing to do with the rat, the rat put its paw on him and he went crazy!! puffing up and hissing like mad, even after i took the rat out he was pissed for about 10 mins, i don't know about you but a boa's hiss is creepy to the core for some reason to me
Do you really believe a snake feels anger as you feel it? That could mean that a snake would involve higher comprehension and reasoning akin to mammals and avian. I do not believe this is the case and we should completely avoid anthropomorphizing snakes and other animals.
Could the snake have been upset and distressed by your intrusion because it felt vulnerable? Then feeling vulnerable and under duress it can certainly defend itself?
That follows the simple logic of snakes can feel secure, or insecure; fight, or flight.
Avoiding putting human emotions such as anger on an animal that does not have those higher thought processes and reasoning skills.
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Re: My snake loves it.
so isnt being upset an emotion? i believe it is, i think all snakes show emotion to some degree i agree they aren't as complex as our emotions, but they are still emotion
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Re: My snake loves it.
Love can have many meanings. To a snake, it may mean "feels secure, prefers, and enjoys" the object or person.
I recently posted a thread which I think stated my BRB "Loves" or "Is loving" his new humid hide. I also believe I said he was "Happy" in the title of it, though I cannot recall now without looking.
I think it's true... ;) So what? It's how I relate to my pets.
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Re: My snake loves it.
I believe that snakes and most every otheir animals experince emotion, but in a much more primitive way. For example I would say my snake loves its hide, however a more correct statement would be like my snake needs it's hide to satisfy the instinctual need for shelter. They most definetly have emotions, just on a diffrent level then ours. I feel that they can become attached to a reliable object or thing such as a always safe hide or the presence of a nondangerous animal
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Re: My snake loves it.
I think there is some confusion as to what emotions actually are. Some folks appear to mix them up with sensations. Stress is a physiological response--not an emotion or even a sensation. We can say we feel stressed, but what we really mean is that we are feeling sensations associated with that physiological response--the side effects. We dislike those sensations, so emotionally we are simply unhappy.
Reptiles do possess the areas of the brain necessary to experience primitive emotion, and this should really end the argument--science does win this one. Some of those primitive emotions include happiness, unhappiness, fear, anger, and curiosity. Emotions are the driving force that leads higher animals to engage in both instinctive, and more especially learned, behavior. Emotions are accompanied by cocktails of brain chemicals which cause physiological responses and trigger various behaviors. Reptiles are evolved enough to be more than instinct-driven automatons.
The purpose for emotions is obvious if you examine them closely--curiousity, for example, is an emotion that leads an animal to seek out novel situations and experiences. It is necessary to balance it with the fear of novel situations that can also be a survival trait. Animals that don't seek novel experiences must stumble upon food, shelter, and mates rather than searching for them more purposefully. A praying mantis wanders rather aimlessly until it happens upon an insect--a snake roams its home territory, but pokes into new areas such as a shed or attic in search of prey. Sophisticated behavior like that requires a balance between caution (mild fear) and curiousity--seeking out too much novelty is detrimental, and an animal's inherent personality and experiences work together to determine how much exploring it does--the winners find the best balance for their area, and survive.
Love is generally considered to be affection for others--this only occurs in social species, and snakes are not social. Snakes cannot love. They can feel happiness, but not love. To find the real emotion of love, with all of its accompanying physiological changes (such as the release of oxytocin), you must look only to social higher animals--animals that have a society. What's more, they must be species that form bonds to other individuals, such as mating pairs or friendships. Humans are highly adaptable, so are capable of loving things that in most of nature would be inappropriate...such as members of other species, or even inanimate objects. We personify them. This is rare in species other than great apes, though it has been documented on rare occasions (such as the lion that adopted and attempted to care for a wildebeest calf--to the calf's detriment).
Snakes never care for one another, and never form bonds with one another. The only interest they have in one another is to determine dominance, or mate. A few species congregate for hibernation. That's pretty much it. Because they do not care for one another, it would be rather silly to think they would care for us. But we do not need them to return our affection, nor should we try to demand it--they are beautiful the way they are, and should be appreciated for their differences.
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