-
First of all, animals will definitely have "nerves", because animals also have cranial nerves, so they also suffer from various neurological diseases at the same time, the psychology community generally believes that animals have no thinking, but there is still a debate about whether there is mental activity, so I think psychogenic mental illness is also in animals, (note that it is not organic) because most animals also have groups, there are certain social models and norms, then it may cause psychological problems, But the social model of animals is not as complex as that of humans, so they should have fewer psychogenic psychosis than humans... It's just speculation that some time ago the group happened to discuss this issue).
-
The biggest difference between humans and animals is the size of the brain, and even ants have more than 1,000 brain cells.
It seems that yes, I don't know if I'm wrong, I didn't really believe in my memory 3 years ago) so the nerves are certain. It depends on the intensity. And animals, not just instinct, animals also have to learn, such as predation and fighting, just instinct, then they are all dead?
And one thing to correct is that human beings are not resisting instincts, and that should be called reasonable restraints, and if they really resist instincts, then you don't have to get married and have children.
Huh? Don't use monks, nuns and eunuchs to refute my family, which is limited by subjective factors and objective conditions, and ordinary people can't compare. There is also upstairs upstairs upstairs saying that animals don't think.
That's too much, for example, the female lioness will mate with several other male lions after the mating period is finished with a male lion in her phase, so that after the baby lion is born, the male lion will not be able to distinguish which is his own flesh and blood, so he will not eat the lion cub, and make such a purposeful behavior is not thinking, this is too cold, right? There is also the fact that conventions and unconventions are defined by humans and cannot be imposed on animals. It's the same with people.
-
Far from something unconventional". It's very common in the animal kingdom. Animals don't "just do things on instinct".
Animals also have affection (elephants will wail over their children's silk nets), and animals also have love (dogs will bring food to their injured partners every day). Animals and people are not much different.
-
Yes, a lot of animals, sometimes commit suicide en masse, I don't know why.
Whale colonies are stranded, and some birds will at some point pounce on what they have caught and commit suicide.
-
Of course, all of them will have nerves, and plants will also have relevant studies.
-
Yes, the most obvious example is. Mad dog.
-
Mad cow disease, mad dogs.
Yes, as long as there is a nervous system.
-
I haven't heard of animals committing suicide if they can't think of it.
-
The animal represented by neuropathy is the monkey. The monkey sedan chair Kaizi is hyperactive and does things irregularly, which is more similar to neurosis.
Monkey is a common name, and many animals in the primate order are called monkeys. The monkey is an order of the mammalian class, which belongs to the highest group of the animal kingdom, and the large and medium sails have a well-developed brain, including the protomonkey suborder and the ape suborder. Monkeys are medium in size, with equally long limbs or slightly longer hind limbs, long or short tails, buccal pouches and arm calluses, and arboreal or terrestrial life, which are common characteristics of monkeys.