your opinion....do cats feel love?

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
So, now we resort to the "noone understands it" scapegoat.
Believe me, I know when someone is too simple to see common sense, I figured that out whenever you asked a question, got the answer, and most likely feeling stupid you quickly changed the subject. I had no intention of changing your view. I don't care enough about you to want to. But chances are an actual thinker may of been reading this thread and learned something.
honestly, i think it's a pretty dumb argument. i can't even believe you are serious. i have been playing around because i do NOT doubt for one second that my cats feel love. i think to argue otherwise is SIMPLY ridiculous. i find the thought of only humans feeling love to be naive. sorry. :peace:bongsmilie


dumbest question ever. :dunce:
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
i would like to see some referances louis we all talk lets see some $$

Do animals have or feel emotion, I cannot tell you the number of times I have been asked that question.
My answer without even looking for any specific emotional studies on animals is simply YES.
I sincerely feel animals are caring creatures and feel for one another some kind of a feeling that can be equated to our understanding of love.
Animals feel pain, they feel and exhibit fear, so why not the feeling of caring?
If it were not true then why do some animals and birds mate for life? It would be very easy just to procreate and leave, never to see the other creature again.
It is my feeling that emotion, the ability to care, which means to like or dislike, is instilled in most warm-blooded animals.
I have also read that mice, iguanas, whales, baboons, elephants, otters, donkeys along with dogs and cats have shown moments of emotion, either of a caring nature or one of dislike. This is not to leave out all the others that I have not read about.
Researchers have come to the conclusion that animals and humans share many of the same traits and emotion is one of them.
To call the emotion love, like or dislike are human words because we do not speak the animal’s language we do not know what they call it. However, from my point of view it is a feeling of some kind of emotion.
Animals of the same species seem to share an emotional tie and we humans can easily accept that. What is hard for us to digest is emotional ties between animals that are normal enemies. The prey and predator becoming what we call friends such as a mouse and a cat. There are many stories of such opposites attracting one another and becoming fast friends.
Scientific research has supported the view that many animals have rich emotional lives.
Charles Darwin made a statement many years ago that said, “the differences among species are differences in degree rather than kind.”
Research has shown that all mammals (including humans) share many of the same neuroanatomical structures that are important for feelings. We also share mirror neurons, which help us to understand one another’s behavior.
Many animals help each other find food and care for the young.
They would not do this, at least to my way of thinking without some sort of emotional attachment to each other.
Many animals know right from wrong and live among themselves with a code of morals that each group follows.
Have you ever looked into your dog’s eyes and seen the love that is there? Have you ever been greeting with joyful yelps and licks and not felt your pet’s love when you come home from work? Has your cat ever curled up alongside you and purred up a storm and not felt loved?
If they were not feeling something for you, why would they do it?
Emotions are a gift from the Universe that made it possible for us to feel and for our animal friends to feel.
Without emotion what would be the purpose of being?
Can you imagine living in an emotionless society, where no one cared?
I cannot!
I treasure my ability to feel emotion and I treasure the fact that I am aware of the emotion my animal’s friends are capable of sharing with me.

Having lived with animals most of my life I feel very positive that every emotion that we feel, is also felt by our pets. More than likely in different degrees, but never-the-less in a degree that equates to whatever their species standard is. If you enjoyed this article please visit my website at http://www.cats-and-dogs-on-the-web.com
 

Louis541

Well-Known Member
Sorry, I read the first few lines of that and it got really redundant. Can you sum it up into a short paragraph?

What do you mean references? Since I'm gonna be giving references why don't you do the same?
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
i would like to see some referances louis we all talk lets see some $$

Do animals have or feel emotion, I cannot tell you the number of times I have been asked that question.
My answer without even looking for any specific emotional studies on animals is simply YES.
I sincerely feel animals are caring creatures and feel for one another some kind of a feeling that can be equated to our understanding of love.
Animals feel pain, they feel and exhibit fear, so why not the feeling of caring?
If it were not true then why do some animals and birds mate for life? It would be very easy just to procreate and leave, never to see the other creature again.
It is my feeling that emotion, the ability to care, which means to like or dislike, is instilled in most warm-blooded animals.
I have also read that mice, iguanas, whales, baboons, elephants, otters, donkeys along with dogs and cats have shown moments of emotion, either of a caring nature or one of dislike. This is not to leave out all the others that I have not read about.
Researchers have come to the conclusion that animals and humans share many of the same traits and emotion is one of them.
To call the emotion love, like or dislike are human words because we do not speak the animal’s language we do not know what they call it. However, from my point of view it is a feeling of some kind of emotion.
Animals of the same species seem to share an emotional tie and we humans can easily accept that. What is hard for us to digest is emotional ties between animals that are normal enemies. The prey and predator becoming what we call friends such as a mouse and a cat. There are many stories of such opposites attracting one another and becoming fast friends.
Scientific research has supported the view that many animals have rich emotional lives.
Charles Darwin made a statement many years ago that said, “the differences among species are differences in degree rather than kind.”
Research has shown that all mammals (including humans) share many of the same neuroanatomical structures that are important for feelings. We also share mirror neurons, which help us to understand one another’s behavior.
Many animals help each other find food and care for the young.
They would not do this, at least to my way of thinking without some sort of emotional attachment to each other.
Many animals know right from wrong and live among themselves with a code of morals that each group follows.
Have you ever looked into your dog’s eyes and seen the love that is there? Have you ever been greeting with joyful yelps and licks and not felt your pet’s love when you come home from work? Has your cat ever curled up alongside you and purred up a storm and not felt loved?
If they were not feeling something for you, why would they do it?
Emotions are a gift from the Universe that made it possible for us to feel and for our animal friends to feel.
Without emotion what would be the purpose of being?
Can you imagine living in an emotionless society, where no one cared?
I cannot!
I treasure my ability to feel emotion and I treasure the fact that I am aware of the emotion my animal’s friends are capable of sharing with me.

Having lived with animals most of my life I feel very positive that every emotion that we feel, is also felt by our pets. More than likely in different degrees, but never-the-less in a degree that equates to whatever their species standard is. If you enjoyed this article please visit my website at http://www.cats-and-dogs-on-the-web.com













ladies and gentlemen, ............................. we have another stalker. lol :mrgreen::eyesmoke:
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
Sorry, I read the first few lines of that and it got really redundant. Can you sum it up into a short paragraph?

What do you mean references? Since I'm gonna be giving references why don't you do the same?
he summed it up "from the heart". you wouldn't get it. :mrgreen::peace:bongsmilie
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
Emotions that Animals Feel

It has been stated that animals, just like people, respond differently to different environments and situations. A 2005 InnovationsReport.com article by Shonagh Wilkie “Animals and Human Experience the Same Emotions” states that animals emotionally respond to external stimuli, and, similarly to humans, can be stressed or anxious in extreme situations.
Animals help and comfort each other, feel empathy. Besides, in his TheBark.com article “Do Animals Have Emotions?” Mark Bekoff, PhD, even argues that animals can be moral creatures, that they understand the difference between good and bad. Though different animals experience and express emotions differently, the fact defined by the scientists is that they do experience emotions
So, thought animals cannot explain what they feel, they can show it. Maybe animals do not realize why or how they experience emotions, but they express emotions in their look and behavior. In the same manner emotions and personal preferences (likes and dislikes) shape an animal’s behavior and response to the external world. The body language, facial expression, or voice tone can tell a lot about how a particular animal is feeling at the moment.


The copyright of the article Do Animals Experience Emotions? in Zoology is owned by Alla Kondrat. Permission to republish Do Animals Experience Emotions? in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.



http://zoology.suite101.com/article.cfm/do_animals_experience_emotions#ixzz0Ii0JicR2&D
way too many sites to post ,it may take a few days and a few hundred lines of text
 

Merlin11

New Member
I've owned a cat, and I loved my cat.

but I can recognize the difference between dependance and appreciation and love.

animals are simply incapable of our definition of love, a commitment.

I mean, even if an animal expresses something like love on the outside, that does NOT mean in any way that it is actually love.

Thats just wacked? Animals commit for life all the time and pine away and die when there mate dies. Where you guys been? Ya just dont get out enough?! Hmmmm? Or maybe you just have your heads firmly planted deeply up your? (wink)
 

Louis541

Well-Known Member
You want me to find an article agreeing with me? That would be a waste of time. This is the internet. They have websites dedicated to finding proof that the government lied to us and that the earth is a cube. Opinions online are a dime a dozen. I could probably find an article about how gravity is a myth. I think you're guilty of copyright infringement as well. :P
 

Merlin11

New Member
merlin to me a soul is like a ghost i'll believe in it when i see one ,now people's character's is another story i can see good people by there actions and compassions

I feel the very same way and that is why I KNOW. I dont BELIEVE at all. But check out the vid any way OK? Thanks.
 

robert 14617

Well-Known Member
merlin the truth about the elephant is the mahout is guiding his actions with a stick that has a hook on it jabbed into his ribs
 

Mysticlown150

Well-Known Member
You guys want to try a test andend the argument that animals don't/do feel love. Might sound bad but try it. Hit your cat firmly with your open palm. Natural instinct the cat runs away. Within a couple hours the cat will come back to you when it's feeding time or simply lay next to you. Now smack your wife who loves you. She won't come back. Animals act on instinct they need to be close to the food source which is hard wired into their brain so they can survive. This can be mistaken as love. Me stating that animals don't have souls is my belief and what the bible says. Now i believe they have no soul, i can say your doomed fo not believing in christ but in the end no one will win.Pretty much finishes up the debate.
 

poplars

Well-Known Member
You guys want to try a test andend the argument that animals don't/do feel love. Might sound bad but try it. Hit your cat firmly with your open palm. Natural instinct the cat runs away. Within a couple hours the cat will come back to you when it's feeding time or simply lay next to you. Now smack your wife who loves you. She won't come back. Animals act on instinct they need to be close to the food source which is hard wired into their brain so they can survive. This can be mistaken as love. Me stating that animals don't have souls is my belief and what the bible says. Now i believe they have no soul, i can say your doomed fo not believing in christ but in the end no one will win.Pretty much finishes up the debate.
I definitely agree with that.
 
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