reptilenotfish
Fish Fanatic
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2020
- Messages
- 108
- Reaction score
- 78
Wow, I love this kind of topic. I read a book titled Mama's Last Hug by an ethologist named Frans Dewall. The book was on if animals have emotions. Most of it was on corvids and primates (go figure), but He did briefly discuss a school of tiger barbs that he had kept. He saw behaviors that he saw as indicating emotion, and he concluded (from other sources as well) that it was likely that emotions are a homologous trait in the evolutionary tree.
I don't really know why people bristle at the thought of emotions in animals different from us, no one will deny that dogs feel emotions, but fish, they are considered different, despite the same amount of time to diversify and develop. Heck, a large motivator to go to a piscitarian diet is the misguided notion that fish feel no pain and might as well just be wiggling meat bags. I'm watching the goalpost move at lightspeed . I'm predicting it's a matter of time before we consider even arthropods as capable of emotion. After all, what else should you conclude when animals release the same chemicals we do when they are exposed to an environment where we would also release those chemicals.
I don't really know why people bristle at the thought of emotions in animals different from us, no one will deny that dogs feel emotions, but fish, they are considered different, despite the same amount of time to diversify and develop. Heck, a large motivator to go to a piscitarian diet is the misguided notion that fish feel no pain and might as well just be wiggling meat bags. I'm watching the goalpost move at lightspeed . I'm predicting it's a matter of time before we consider even arthropods as capable of emotion. After all, what else should you conclude when animals release the same chemicals we do when they are exposed to an environment where we would also release those chemicals.