Friday, 27 September 2013
My Real Story: A mother and a son who witnessed the Nairobi’s Mas...
My Real Story: A mother and a son who witnessed the Nairobi’s Mas...: Kenya is considered as the most beautiful city and the people living there are luckier to be in that city despite of the terror attack o...
Thursday, 26 September 2013
Who is happier?? Animals or Humans
This question sounds odd!!
But this has become factual. God has given humans the first priority before animals recalling their scrutinisation, affections, examinations, respects, liberality and functions yet they have had no impact between animals and themselves. God distinguished individual dispositions and their mental parts which made them extraordinary yet there is no quality now. It is this incredible imperative proficiency to be reflective to address the noteworthiness and inspiration behind vicinity and attempt to reveal a response for Homo sapiens that leaves people differentiated from animals.
Animals, like humans, can feel fear and pain. This is obvious in the wild after all; fear is a function of survival. The idea that animals can feel pain has also been proven through clinical tests, like teaching animals to fear their food supply through electric shocks.
Animals clearly feel fear, and as a result of the scientific community's increased sensitivity to this issue, stricter regulations concerning animal testing and meat production have been in place since the middle of the 20th century. But what about the other end of the spectrum? A debate has been ongoing for some time now over whether animals have the capacity to feel happiness or a human does. It certainly follows that they should be able to, considering that they're capable of fear. The problem comes in the distinction between fear and happiness and animals and humans.
Fear is an emotion that generally produces observable behavior. A field mouse will flee from the shadow of a hawk flying overhead, for example. Happiness, however, is much more subjective, and produces less distinctly discernable behavior. What's more, there's no reason for happiness to exist in the animal kingdom, since all necessary behavior is considered to serve as some form of survival mechanism.
But as the similarities in physiology and biochemistry between humans and animals become ever clearer it becomes harder to ignore the joy of life in the wild. Animal behavior takes us on a tour of the sunny side of animal life, and argues that a shared capacity for feeling demands a radical shift in our relationship with the animal world.
Animals attack on other animals for food, as they are born carnivores, omnivorous and herbivorous. They have the rights to kill the species of the same. Are humans following the same process of killing other humans? Are human’s cannibal? They are not but their ego and power are making people to kill other people for their sake. Animals have heart but humans are heartless. I am saying animals have heart because they attack other animal only when they are hungry that too only one animal but what humans do to take revenge from one person they kill thousands of people as happened in Kenya. God must be in shock what he created what the result is, he might have never thought of this in fact never imagined. This world itself has become a selfish that killing 100 people doesn’t make any sense.
But animals don't ponder evolutionary adaptation – like us, they play for fun. Humans have improved their own standing and religions which have commandingly made them to execute different religions that too in the same race, simply to keep in hold off their self-regard, self-nobility and affirmation.
Life in the wild is often viewed as an earnest struggle to survive, but evidence is rapidly accumulating that animal life holds great potential for joy. Nature rewards behavior that promotes success in animals because of its evolutionary advantages, but this underlying reason for the reward doesn't stop these successful behaviors themselves being enjoyable. Play is an important tool for developing physical strength, coordination, and social skills.
But this has become factual. God has given humans the first priority before animals recalling their scrutinisation, affections, examinations, respects, liberality and functions yet they have had no impact between animals and themselves. God distinguished individual dispositions and their mental parts which made them extraordinary yet there is no quality now. It is this incredible imperative proficiency to be reflective to address the noteworthiness and inspiration behind vicinity and attempt to reveal a response for Homo sapiens that leaves people differentiated from animals.
Animals, like humans, can feel fear and pain. This is obvious in the wild after all; fear is a function of survival. The idea that animals can feel pain has also been proven through clinical tests, like teaching animals to fear their food supply through electric shocks.
Animals clearly feel fear, and as a result of the scientific community's increased sensitivity to this issue, stricter regulations concerning animal testing and meat production have been in place since the middle of the 20th century. But what about the other end of the spectrum? A debate has been ongoing for some time now over whether animals have the capacity to feel happiness or a human does. It certainly follows that they should be able to, considering that they're capable of fear. The problem comes in the distinction between fear and happiness and animals and humans.
Fear is an emotion that generally produces observable behavior. A field mouse will flee from the shadow of a hawk flying overhead, for example. Happiness, however, is much more subjective, and produces less distinctly discernable behavior. What's more, there's no reason for happiness to exist in the animal kingdom, since all necessary behavior is considered to serve as some form of survival mechanism.
But as the similarities in physiology and biochemistry between humans and animals become ever clearer it becomes harder to ignore the joy of life in the wild. Animal behavior takes us on a tour of the sunny side of animal life, and argues that a shared capacity for feeling demands a radical shift in our relationship with the animal world.
Animals attack on other animals for food, as they are born carnivores, omnivorous and herbivorous. They have the rights to kill the species of the same. Are humans following the same process of killing other humans? Are human’s cannibal? They are not but their ego and power are making people to kill other people for their sake. Animals have heart but humans are heartless. I am saying animals have heart because they attack other animal only when they are hungry that too only one animal but what humans do to take revenge from one person they kill thousands of people as happened in Kenya. God must be in shock what he created what the result is, he might have never thought of this in fact never imagined. This world itself has become a selfish that killing 100 people doesn’t make any sense.
But animals don't ponder evolutionary adaptation – like us, they play for fun. Humans have improved their own standing and religions which have commandingly made them to execute different religions that too in the same race, simply to keep in hold off their self-regard, self-nobility and affirmation.
Animals annihilate different
creatures for their stomach yet not in the same species as of people. Humans
have ended up so childish that to take vindicate from one individual they are
pulverizing the entire neighborhood. We don't need to think for giving samples
it recently happened two days prior in Kenya. Islamist ambushed Westgate
shopping center in Nairobi executing many lives. Humans have utilized their
brains and made weapons for weapons, which they were prior utilizing for great
exercises. They made shells, ammo and dynamites for their essential purposes
however they are utilizing it for wrecking the lives of gathering of
individuals.
Life in the wild is often viewed as an earnest struggle to survive, but evidence is rapidly accumulating that animal life holds great potential for joy. Nature rewards behavior that promotes success in animals because of its evolutionary advantages, but this underlying reason for the reward doesn't stop these successful behaviors themselves being enjoyable. Play is an important tool for developing physical strength, coordination, and social skills.
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