Saturday, July 25, 2020

do they feel?





I love this little vignette. Are they communicating? Yes. Are they aware of one another? Yes. Is each bird aware of itself? Yes. Do they care for each other? Yes. There’s a good chance they are siblings still hanging out together. 

Why do I even ask these silly questions? 

The French philosopher René Descartes believed that animals operated purely by instinct, like machines or mechanisms. They did not communicate, care or even think about the other animals around them. They didn’t use words, they didn’t feel but were mere automata. His views justified the notion that somehow we were separate from the rest of nature. Human beings were above it all and it was acceptable to be cruel to animals, to beat them, behead them or drop them into boiling water, because they simply do not feel.

As anyone who has taken care of wild animals or even had a dog knows Descartes was insensitive and WRONG.

You can tell that it is the 132nd day of my quarantine if I am starting to pick on long dead French philosophers. 


I love the above photograph sent to me by my friend Betty Thompson in Kansas. It’s three western kingbirds, a species I have never seen. Thank you Betty!


And for those on the go, a gram in an Instant. 


Author of Natural HistoriesGhost Birds and Ephemeral by Nature all published by the University of Tennessee Press.




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Friday, July 17, 2020

we need a dose of cute









So cute! Yes. Yesterday’s Instagram post possum babies were so cute. And according to an article appearing in last December’s Discover magazine that euphoric feeling that engulfs you when you see a baby of any sort including opossums brings out more than your care-giving nature. It also triggers a portion of your brain that fills you with a sense of well-being, empathy, sharing and community.

The article written by Gemma Tarlach goes on to cite several authorities studying cuteness and why it makes us feel intense empathy. Social psychologist Kamilla Knutsen Steinnes and her peers call it kama muta, a Sanskrit term because there is no words in Western language that describes the sudden intensification of communal sharing.  

Kumbaya!! If you are feeling blue, go find something cute to look at. 


And for those on the go, a gram in an Instant. 


Author of Natural HistoriesGhost Birds and Ephemeral by Nature all published by the University of Tennessee Press.




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