- Joined
- May 3, 2005
- Messages
- 487
How about you pour concentrated Acid on yourself and stab yourself to death. Try that and let me know the outcome. I'm sure it will please metry it and let me know the outcome....
How about you pour concentrated Acid on yourself and stab yourself to death. Try that and let me know the outcome. I'm sure it will please metry it and let me know the outcome....
:clap: :clap: :clap: :clap:How about you pour concentrated Acid on yourself and stab yourself to death. Try that and let me know the outcome. I'm sure it will please me
Suicide as humans do it, with all feelings etc. involved is probably indeed something that humans can do. It's not a human invention otherwise sex would also be a human invention.Suicide is a human invention
See above. You probably can't call it committing suicide, because most animals don't have all the feelings, emotions, etc. that a human has, but animals do stop living after having been exposed to a lot of stress.It would be foolish for an animal to commit suicide.......
I agree with this but I've only heard of this happening to complex mammals, such as dogs. A scorpion has no feelings and the stress it endures is mearly physical.Suicide as humans do it, with all feelings etc. involved is probably indeed something that humans can do. It's not a human invention otherwise sex would also be a human invention.
However also note that there are various species in which the animal stops with day to day behavior and dies because of this after it has been exposed to a lot of stress.
See above. You probably can't call it committing suicide, because most animals don't have all the feelings, emotions, etc. that a human has, but animals do stop living after having been exposed to a lot of stress.
And it's silly to drag "survival of the fittest" and natural instinct into this like it's some rigid law. Suicide does happen in humans, and since humans are part of nature it's natural. It's not some modern gimmick or something humans invented 3000 years ago.
There is a movie on chimps which has a part were the young chimp, even though it can already eat by itself, stops living shortly after the mother died. And I am sure people know stories about cats and dogs who died either shortly after their owner died, or a companion.I agree with this but I've only heard of this happening to complex mammals, such as dogs.
No doubt about that. On the other hand it's fascinating (well to me) how complex (to me) their mating behavior is.I didn't know about the feather thing. But i suppose a bird is still more complex than a scorp.