laitimes

Do animals have the ability to think?

author:User Ying Lu 88

Do animals have thoughts? Experts deny that humans are the only "higher animals in the world with thinking ability, and the reason why they are advanced is that they have thinking ability, and the fundamental difference between humans and animals lies in this."

So, how to explain some of the "behaviors" of animals? Experts say that's their "instinct."

The so-called "instinct" is "no need to learn, it can be"; the implication is "no need to use the brain at all", or "they have no brain at all".

I wondered, animals are more powerful than humans— they are born to know, they don't have to use their brains, they can live happily and happily for a lifetime just by instinct.

A dog resting on its stomach in front of the door suddenly stood up and shook its body, running unhurriedly and clearly aimed into the distance. I rode behind to see where it went. As a result, it reached the farmer's market about 500 meters away, and went under the counter where the meat was sold to find food.

Why did this dog suddenly go to the market, it must be "considering" the time has come, the morning market should open, go to find some meat to eat.

Doesn't it mean that "man is changed by monkeys", then monkeys are animals, they have no thinking, how did they become people with thinking ability? Is it not a "mutation"?

In Animal World, there is a lemur that, when it eats nuts, will put the nuts on a large rock, and then lift another stone to smash it, and if the nut placed on the big stone is unstable, it will put it in a carefully selected position...

Let's not talk about the monkey Ha, it is refined, let's say "all the organs are complete" sparrow.

That day, I saw a sparrow that caught a beetle about 3 centimeters long, and it did not eat or fly away, but took the worm and slammed it on the ground for a while before it flew away... I looked closer and there were some carapace fragments of beetles underground...

What is this sparrow doing? In fact, it is a rough processing of the ingredients - removing the carapace of the insects, that is, we pick up the fish and scrape the scales. How to eat the processed beetles when they take them home? Is it braised or steamed? Of course it doesn't, it doesn't topple the spoon, and it doesn't have the American ability to throw pots; it takes the rough-processed beetle home to feed its bird cubs. Don't look at the sparrow's thin throat, you can only eat things like millet, but their cubs have large mouths and thick necks, and even fat caterpillars can swallow. However, the cubs are not able to digest the hard shell of the beetle, so the cannabis finch "thinks" very thoughtfully, does it very carefully, no matter what, remove the hard shell, do not prick the baby's throat.

So, the question arises again – how should we explain the sparrow's rough processing of ingredients, or is it a "brainless instinct"?

Do animals have the ability to think?
Do animals have the ability to think?

Read on