nomadofthehills
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2007
- Messages
- 36
Plants do NOT feel pain lol...
I'll try and locate the info again but it has been a very long time since I researched the subject. We had a thread going to discuss it but I can't recall which forum it was on way back then. Not much is for sure when it comes to tarantulas, it is still a pretty new subject so I am always open to new information.It's not that I don't believe you , but where is that info from ?
how would you know ? did you ask any ( t ) how it is for them !!!!!Tarantulas don't experience pain like we do, they only respond to outside stimuli.
We know because the nervous system of a tarantula isn't complex enough to process stimuli like that of a human.how would you know ? did you ask any ( t ) how it is for them !!!!!
Code Monkey said:Who here believes Ts can also appreciate the difference between HDTV and regular analog television? An old AM radio verus 5.1 surround sound from Sirius satellite radio? How about the smoothness of silk versus burlap?
Come on, raise your hands?
I'm guessing no one, yet they can certainly sense all of these things but how their brain processes the stimuli (it is wrong to insist inverts don't have a brain, Ts do in fact have one of the larger invert brains) is limited both by the sense organs and the complexity of their nervous system.
Yet you emo heads will sit here and insist they can *feel* pain. Bollocks.
A single celled amoeba will avoid negative stimuli, these gross behavioral responses related to avoiding danger have as much to do with demonstrating *feeling* pain as lack of gross behavioral responses have to do with demonstrating joy and ecstasy in a tarantula, or do you believe they can do that too?
Cacoseraph said:i think some ppl are missing a distinction between pain and negative stimuli
pain:
http://m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?bo...ionary&va=pain
quote:
2 a : usually localized physical suffering associated with bodily disorder (as a disease or an injury); also : a basic bodily sensation induced by a noxious stimulus, received by naked nerve endings, characterized by physical discomfort (as pricking, throbbing, or aching), and typically leading to evasive action b : acute mental or emotional distress or suffering : GRIEF
this definition highlights two important things. a certain order of efferent nerves are required for pain and there is an emotional like, context to pain that requires a certain degree of sophistication.
granted m-w ain't exactly the end all and be all of knowledge, but it helps to draw a distinction between what the like, lower and higher animals experience
EDIT:
BUT!!!!
(_)_) (that's a big butt)
if you ever visit my house you will find my spiders set up in as stressless an environment as i can manage... and you won't catch me poking 'em with sticks... just cuz they can't feel pain, per se, doesn't mean stuff isn't deletorious for them
Code Monkey said:Exactly. Negative taxis, abnormal behavioral responses, etc. are 100% signs that something is happening to the creature that is not beneficial, but it does not mean they are suffering, despairing, or slipping into depression.
Folks: anthropomorphism wasn't true with your fuzzy stuffed animals when you were wee children, it isn't true with your fuzzy spiders now that you're older
Cirith Ungol said:Here is another example for you: T's are known to pull their own legs off if those are damaged. This occurs even when there is no emediate bleeding. Try taking your own leg of just because it doesn't really function as you'd like it to. Or just imagine you'd be ripping on a finger 'til it comes of or imagine cutting it off with a knife.
Even if you had the luxury of doing that just for the sensation of it I bet nothing in the world would convince you to do this because it's just too painful. Now imagine, the spider has 7 more legs it can use even if one is limp, but still it choses to take its leg off eventho it would function well with that limp attached.
That too should show you that Ts "look" on the sensation of pain differently than mammals...
Code Monkey said:At the risk of carrying out this exercise in futility at breaking through emotions masquerading as analysis any further, there is nothing nonsensical about the argument at all.
There is nothing in a tarantula or a lobster or a cricket or slug or any similar creature that physiologically demonstrates a capacity for anything beyond a creature that is largely a skinner-box with a wee bit of associative and habituative learning on top for some behavioral flexibility.
Now, go ahead and reject the best information that the scientific method can give us regarding the abilities of the nervous system of such creatures under the blanket guise of "science doesn't know everything" if you want, but keep in mind that once you leave what rational analysis tells us, you're in purely made up land.
To reject what science tells us about invert nervous systems is to put you in a sitution where I can claim that not only don't Ts feel pain, but they actually feel exquisite, exploding ecstasy from having their leg pulled off and the reaction you see is because they're afraid the pleasure will be too intense and they'll pass out and be unable to escape from a predator while in their state of bliss. Furthermore, the subsequent lack of reaction after you've pulled the leg off is because they are all blissed out.
I have every bit as much proof of that bit of anthropomorphism as you do for them suffering.
You see, writing stuff like this is exactly like talking to a wall. I could write a thousand page paper on this and there'd still be a few idiots who still want to believe that a tarantula is a miniature dog or cat no matter how much proof they were given to the contrary. This is simply not the case. These people would continue to ask rhetorical questions as if that's the end all be all proof that bugs can't feel pain.Code Monkey said:Because we know they don't have anything to feel with - you needn't figure out someway to obliterate your mind by placing it inside a nervous system that lacks any awareness to know what *no awareness* "feels" like: no awareness = no suffering.
I honestly do not understand why this topic comes up, I honestly do not understand why there is debate. If someone insisted that Ts could learn language I hope that no one here would agree. Yet how do we *know* they can't learn language, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it. How do we know they can't fly, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it. How do we know they can't shoot lasers out of their spinnerets, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it.
Yet when it comes to this emotionally laden subject, suddenly there is all this room for debate with people. Suddenly the whole of neurophysiology and behavioral science is inadequate even though its how you accept such basic facts as the limited colour spectrum seen by dogs or cats - it's not like we asked them, we jammed probes in their brains and nerves and measured when they fired and in response to what. And when it comes to inverts, their nerves have been poked and prodded millions of times over - there's nothing there that indicates anything required to suffer, but yet you'll still fall back on your "we can't know" even though we do know for all intents and purposes.
If you think there is even a slight chance your tarantulas have awareness enough to suffer from negative stimuli, then the same goes for the crickets and roaches you feed them, the same goes for the mosquito on your arm you just smashed, and the same goes for the fleas on your dog. And if its the fact that they respond and avoid negative stimuli that opens this doubt for you, then please throw out your bleach and soap, because you can get flagellated bacteria to move towards positive things and away from negative things for them, clearly they might be aware and suffering from our actions as well
I can think of some people I'd like to skin...yah it hurts imagine shedding your whole skin as a human being?is it more clearer????
AND SO CAN I :wall: :wall: :wall:I can think of some people I'd like to skin...
But that tarantula has spent several weeks getting ready. They have a new layer of skin underneath, not open flesh.
I'd also like to point out that Code Monkey here on the boards is also one of the most qualified people on the subject, having been through graduate school and being more familiar with the invertebrate nervous system than any of us, which is why I keep quoting him.Firstly, and importantly, this is a really technical subject, and I'm not an expert on the physiology of pain.
Bacteria will move away from negative stimuli. Bacteria can't feel pain because they don't have a nervous system.i think alot of people here are very narrow minded on this. first of all if a t can feel vibration the way they do than how can they not have a nerves to also feel pain. they are very sensitive to any vibration or air disturbance as anyone knows that keeps them.
Because we can take a look inside vertebrate brains and see roughly the process of exactly what pain is and then analyze a tarantula's brain to see how it reacts to different stimuli and come to two conclusions.so therefor how can you posibly say that you know they cant feel pain to the same degree. thats just plain closed minded and ignorant. kind of like when science proved that its impossible for bumble bee's to fly.
Dig up the original source for this comment because I'm having a real hard time taking you seriously on face value.kind of like when science proved that its impossible for bumble bee's to fly.
We know because the nervous system of a tarantula isn't complex enough to process stimuli like that of a human.how would you know ? did you ask any ( t ) how it is for them !!!!!
Code Monkey said:Who here believes Ts can also appreciate the difference between HDTV and regular analog television? An old AM radio verus 5.1 surround sound from Sirius satellite radio? How about the smoothness of silk versus burlap?
Come on, raise your hands?
I'm guessing no one, yet they can certainly sense all of these things but how their brain processes the stimuli (it is wrong to insist inverts don't have a brain, Ts do in fact have one of the larger invert brains) is limited both by the sense organs and the complexity of their nervous system.
Yet you emo heads will sit here and insist they can *feel* pain. Bollocks.
A single celled amoeba will avoid negative stimuli, these gross behavioral responses related to avoiding danger have as much to do with demonstrating *feeling* pain as lack of gross behavioral responses have to do with demonstrating joy and ecstasy in a tarantula, or do you believe they can do that too?
Cacoseraph said:i think some ppl are missing a distinction between pain and negative stimuli
pain:
http://m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?bo...ionary&va=pain
quote:
2 a : usually localized physical suffering associated with bodily disorder (as a disease or an injury); also : a basic bodily sensation induced by a noxious stimulus, received by naked nerve endings, characterized by physical discomfort (as pricking, throbbing, or aching), and typically leading to evasive action b : acute mental or emotional distress or suffering : GRIEF
this definition highlights two important things. a certain order of efferent nerves are required for pain and there is an emotional like, context to pain that requires a certain degree of sophistication.
granted m-w ain't exactly the end all and be all of knowledge, but it helps to draw a distinction between what the like, lower and higher animals experience
EDIT:
BUT!!!!
(_)_) (that's a big butt)
if you ever visit my house you will find my spiders set up in as stressless an environment as i can manage... and you won't catch me poking 'em with sticks... just cuz they can't feel pain, per se, doesn't mean stuff isn't deletorious for them
Code Monkey said:Exactly. Negative taxis, abnormal behavioral responses, etc. are 100% signs that something is happening to the creature that is not beneficial, but it does not mean they are suffering, despairing, or slipping into depression.
Folks: anthropomorphism wasn't true with your fuzzy stuffed animals when you were wee children, it isn't true with your fuzzy spiders now that you're older
Cirith Ungol said:Here is another example for you: T's are known to pull their own legs off if those are damaged. This occurs even when there is no emediate bleeding. Try taking your own leg of just because it doesn't really function as you'd like it to. Or just imagine you'd be ripping on a finger 'til it comes of or imagine cutting it off with a knife.
Even if you had the luxury of doing that just for the sensation of it I bet nothing in the world would convince you to do this because it's just too painful. Now imagine, the spider has 7 more legs it can use even if one is limp, but still it choses to take its leg off eventho it would function well with that limp attached.
That too should show you that Ts "look" on the sensation of pain differently than mammals...
Code Monkey said:At the risk of carrying out this exercise in futility at breaking through emotions masquerading as analysis any further, there is nothing nonsensical about the argument at all.
There is nothing in a tarantula or a lobster or a cricket or slug or any similar creature that physiologically demonstrates a capacity for anything beyond a creature that is largely a skinner-box with a wee bit of associative and habituative learning on top for some behavioral flexibility.
Now, go ahead and reject the best information that the scientific method can give us regarding the abilities of the nervous system of such creatures under the blanket guise of "science doesn't know everything" if you want, but keep in mind that once you leave what rational analysis tells us, you're in purely made up land.
To reject what science tells us about invert nervous systems is to put you in a sitution where I can claim that not only don't Ts feel pain, but they actually feel exquisite, exploding ecstasy from having their leg pulled off and the reaction you see is because they're afraid the pleasure will be too intense and they'll pass out and be unable to escape from a predator while in their state of bliss. Furthermore, the subsequent lack of reaction after you've pulled the leg off is because they are all blissed out.
I have every bit as much proof of that bit of anthropomorphism as you do for them suffering.
Code Monkey said:Because we know they don't have anything to feel with - you needn't figure out someway to obliterate your mind by placing it inside a nervous system that lacks any awareness to know what *no awareness* "feels" like: no awareness = no suffering.
I honestly do not understand why this topic comes up, I honestly do not understand why there is debate. If someone insisted that Ts could learn language I hope that no one here would agree. Yet how do we *know* they can't learn language, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it. How do we know they can't fly, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it. How do we know they can't shoot lasers out of their spinnerets, oh yeah, no anatomical structures for it.
Yet when it comes to this emotionally laden subject, suddenly there is all this room for debate with people. Suddenly the whole of neurophysiology and behavioral science is inadequate even though its how you accept such basic facts as the limited colour spectrum seen by dogs or cats - it's not like we asked them, we jammed probes in their brains and nerves and measured when they fired and in response to what. And when it comes to inverts, their nerves have been poked and prodded millions of times over - there's nothing there that indicates anything required to suffer, but yet you'll still fall back on your "we can't know" even though we do know for all intents and purposes.
If you think there is even a slight chance your tarantulas have awareness enough to suffer from negative stimuli, then the same goes for the crickets and roaches you feed them, the same goes for the mosquito on your arm you just smashed, and the same goes for the fleas on your dog. And if its the fact that they respond and avoid negative stimuli that opens this doubt for you, then please throw out your bleach and soap, because you can get flagellated bacteria to move towards positive things and away from negative things for them, clearly they might be aware and suffering from our actions as well
JR47 said:as with the bumble bee thing, they did in fact say that bumble bee's cant fly but they do. the article said that the wings were to small keep the large body in the air. which is why they were studying them to try to find out how they can fly when science said that it was impossible for them to do so.
which the only point im trying to make is just because we cant prove a t can feel or not feel pain doesnt mean they cant. so, sorry if i offended anyone. just my opinion.
Hey...sorry if you got the wrong idea. I tend to be a little blunt...and mean, especially when I think people are just spouting off and not actually reading what I'm saying.JR47 said:well, first off. i wasnt meaning to offend anyone. and i am sure that i could be very wrong. i just feel it is narrow minded to think that we can know that there is no way a t can feel pain. im not saying i know that they can and they probobly dont feel pain as we do. all im saying is that i cant and i dont think anyone can say they do not feel pain and alot of people claim that they know that they dont.
Since I've nothing to lose...I just thought I'd table my two years of community college (hey...going to a REAL college in the fall) and mention that I have a combined four hours a day for researching stuff such as this.DrAce said:Oh, and because I have an inferiority complex, I thought I'd table my Ph.D. in biochem at this point, and say that I also have a few clues on the subject... but not specifically directed to Tarantula brains. It's a freshly minted Ph.D., so I'm still not over getting it
You know your degree doesn't count until you've gone through the hazing of a post doc or two. ;P(Oh, and because I have an inferiority complex, I thought I'd table my Ph.D. in biochem at this point, and say that I also have a few clues on the subject... but not specifically directed to Tarantula brains. It's a freshly minted Ph.D., so I'm still not over getting it)