I was scrolling through a discussion board yesterday, and someone put it out there as a point of fact that animals don't have feelings. For context, the thread was on a vegan discussion, and this isn't to dissuade anyone from changing their diets. There is still a natural order, and I get it (I don't think you hate animals or anything like that).
I actually feel like animals are easier to read emotionally (maybe emotionally isn't the eight word?). They generally don't mask or try to hide their feelings or their intentions. If they want affection, they let you know. I'd they don't, they let you know. Hunger? Playtime? Potty? They have a way of communicating. Feral animals, much more independent, are not looking for the attention that pets are, so, eh, often when you see them they're just working on surviving.. But, by observation, you can tell they have feelings.
For a bit of anecdotal evidence, I remember growing up, we had a cat that was pretty acrobatic. One day, I was sitting in the front room, just eating my pot pie. He had jumped to the top of this grandfather clock, and from there tried to jump onto the blade of a ceiling fan. Underneath the ceiling fan was a table full of ceramics. It was a wreck. He broke the fan, a bunch of glass, and, I would say his pride.i didn't have much a reaction, because the whole scene seemed so ridiculous. But even before my parents got home, he just went to his spot in the back of the house and hid. Nothing seemed physically wrong with him (no wounds, no limping).... it really seemed like he felt shame or embarrassment.
I don't know. Anyone have any thoughts on this type of thing?
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“There's only one rule that I know of, babies - God damn it, you've got to be kind.”― Kurt Vonnegut