Nope, it's on top.Aradhus wrote:I'm pretty sure Nattys default position is dick.
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Nope, it's on top.Aradhus wrote:I'm pretty sure Nattys default position is dick.

Lootifer wrote:LOL! Now you're just being a dicknatty_dread wrote:A cat with no eyeballs would survive if it was living in an environment where having eyes wasn't strictly necessary for survival.Lootifer wrote:How so?natty_dread wrote:Fallacious statementLootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
For example, there are some lizards and fish that live in places with almost no light at all, and they have evolved to have no eyes.Well played though I guess.
However if we are being anal, cats in their current stage of evolution would result in the little guy not surviving. Not only do cats rely heavily on their eyes, it wouldn't even get to that point because the mother of the litter would abandon it as soon as it realised it couldn't keep up (in the wild of course - some "modern" mother cats are more tolerant).
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.

The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.

Yay!Gillipig wrote:

Isn't it rather the case that some hereditary traits like relatively low aggression and the like will be specifically selected for during the process of domestication?Symmetry wrote:The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
The article suggests that a gene is actually in play- and that it has an effect beyond behaviour- the appearance of the animal changes. It's an interesting read.MeDeFe wrote:Isn't it rather the case that some hereditary traits like relatively low aggression and the like will be specifically selected for during the process of domestication?Symmetry wrote:The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.
Miraculously, Belyaev had compressed thousands of years of domestication into a few years. But he wasn't just looking to prove he could create friendly foxes. He had a hunch that he could use them to unlock domestication's molecular mysteries. Domesticated animals are known to share a common set of characteristics, a fact documented by Darwin in The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication. They tend to be smaller, with floppier ears and curlier tails than their untamed progenitors. Such traits tend to make animals appear appealingly juvenile to humans. Their coats are sometimes spotted—piebald, in scientific terminology—while their wild ancestors' coats are solid. These and other traits, sometimes referred to as the domestication phenotype, exist in varying degrees across a remarkably wide range of species, from dogs, pigs, and cows to some nonmammalians like chickens, and even a few fish.
That just proves my point though. Domestication is just a different environment, which causes a certain gene to be expressed in the organism... it's not like domestication suddenly shuts down evolution.Symmetry wrote:The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.

Blind humans only survive because of the intelligence of the human race. A million years ago, a blind human would be fucked. A blind kitten would probably be more fucked. Both have a great chance of surviving to their maximum age that their bodies permit because of the assistance humans can lead both of them. We feed them, keep them company, shelter them, etc. A blind kitten in the wild would only be helped by its mother until a certain point until the mother sees that the kitten (well, it'd be a cat at this point) is too old to be cared for. It would only be a matter of time until some sort of predator comes and kills it or something else.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.
But you still don't "breed a gene into" the animals. Animals which show the greatest expression of the gene will tend to be allowed to produce offspring, the others won't.Symmetry wrote:The article suggests that a gene is actually in play- and that it has an effect beyond behaviour- the appearance of the animal changes. It's an interesting read.MeDeFe wrote:Isn't it rather the case that some hereditary traits like relatively low aggression and the like will be specifically selected for during the process of domestication?Symmetry wrote:The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.
Link
Miraculously, Belyaev had compressed thousands of years of domestication into a few years. But he wasn't just looking to prove he could create friendly foxes. He had a hunch that he could use them to unlock domestication's molecular mysteries. Domesticated animals are known to share a common set of characteristics, a fact documented by Darwin in The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication. They tend to be smaller, with floppier ears and curlier tails than their untamed progenitors. Such traits tend to make animals appear appealingly juvenile to humans. Their coats are sometimes spotted—piebald, in scientific terminology—while their wild ancestors' coats are solid. These and other traits, sometimes referred to as the domestication phenotype, exist in varying degrees across a remarkably wide range of species, from dogs, pigs, and cows to some nonmammalians like chickens, and even a few fish.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.

...yeah, i think we're done talking here.natty_dread wrote:Have you ever heard of Daredevil?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
i'm quite sure it's a rat.MeDeFe wrote:A giant mouse devouring a bear... Now that is awesome.Symmetry wrote:
I'm sorry, have we been talking? I didn't notice. I thought you were just being your usual self, throwing off-hand remarks from the sidelines without really participating in the discussion.john9blue wrote:...yeah, i think we're done talking here.natty_dread wrote:Have you ever heard of Daredevil?
your grasp of the larger sociological implications of darwinism is impressive, but when you make obviously facetious posts like this, it becomes clear that you aren't looking for a meaningful discussion

i'm sure cats would be able to survive at least in urban environment (and i mean just living on the streets, not having any 'home') purely by relying on smell, sound and their whiskers to catch prey and scavenge food. cats are manly scavengers, preying on weak or careless animals and scavenging food that is left behind, either died of natural cause (or unnatural cause) or left behind by other animals or human. there's plenty of food to find for even blind cats. and i wouldn't be surprised either if a blind cat would survive in a forest or something. eyesight isn't even a cats primary sense. unlike humans, most animals don't rely on their eyes for primary senses, humans are highly sigh-oriented, most animals are sound or smell-oriented, or use completely different senses that are not nearly as developed for us humans.Lootifer wrote:LOL! Now you're just being a dicknatty_dread wrote:A cat with no eyeballs would survive if it was living in an environment where having eyes wasn't strictly necessary for survival.Lootifer wrote:How so?natty_dread wrote:Fallacious statementLootifer wrote:yes yes darwinism wouldnt let this little tacker survive
For example, there are some lizards and fish that live in places with almost no light at all, and they have evolved to have no eyes.Well played though I guess.
However if we are being anal, cats in their current stage of evolution would result in the little guy not surviving. Not only do cats rely heavily on their eyes, it wouldn't even get to that point because the mother of the litter would abandon it as soon as it realised it couldn't keep up (in the wild of course - some "modern" mother cats are more tolerant).
No you're right. But the fundamentals of darwinism (i.e. the strongest survive) has not really been shown to be true in the modern or domestic society.natty_dread wrote:That just proves my point though. Domestication is just a different environment, which causes a certain gene to be expressed in the organism... it's not like domestication suddenly shuts down evolution.Symmetry wrote:The article I posted earlier does suggest that their is evidence for domesticity gene which can be bred into animals, or mammals at least. I think your other points are good though.natty_dread wrote:The Theory of Evolution does not make a distinction between "wild" and "domesticated". Both are just different environments for organisms to adapt to. Humans aren't somehow "apart" from nature, we're a part of it.Army of GOD wrote:True and obviously the only reason it's surviving in its domesticated environment is because it has humans to look out for it. If this cat was born and stayed in the wild, it wouldn't stand much of a chance to live past a certain point on the young side.john9blue wrote:the principles behind darwinism wouldn't favor that cat's survival, given its environment. it's that simple.
So an eyeless kitten may be well enough adapted to survive in domesticated conditions.
We have blind humans too, and they survive just fine in their environment.
"Strongest" is an arbitrary definition. It's more like "the one that's best adapted in it's immediate environment survives".Lootifer wrote:No you're right. But the fundamentals of darwinism (i.e. the strongest survive) has not really been shown to be true in the modern or domestic society.


Neither do I but I still have to wear them......sometimes.nietzsche wrote:cat's don't like clothes, that's animal abuse.