dh@. wrote:
On Sun, 08 May 2005 17:52:37 GMT, Rudy Canoza wrote:
dh@. wrote:
On Sat, 07 May 2005 17:31:07 GMT, Rudy Canoza wrote:
Joanne wrote:
dh@. wrote in message ...
On Thu, 05 May 2005 21:03:59 GMT, Rudy Canoza wrote:
Animals experience disappointment Goo. Almost any
child with a dog could tell you about it. It doesn't mean
that all animals can, but it does mean some of them
can.
Definitely true of parrots. Billy, my Severe Macaw makes a disappointed
vocal when he wants to come out to play and I have to walk away without him.
It's not a scream for attention; it's a quick, low vocalization of
disappointment without doubt.
Bull****.
She is quite likely to be a good and decent person
That's lovely. She still said some bull****, though.
You are projecting. It's called
anthropomorphization: the projection of human
characteristics onto non-human things.
LOL!!! For one thing Goo
****wit, we have been through this befo YOU are
the goober. "Goober" is an insult and slur against
stupid ****witted southern rednecks, and YOU are the
stupid ****witted southern redneck. YOU are the
Goober. Don't make this mistake again.
Goo is short for Goober.
And YOU are the only Goober here, ****wit. It is an
insult aimed at stupid, ****witted rednecks: aimed at
YOU, in other words.
You are the Goober.
you are the LAST person who
could possibly have a clue about something like that
No, ****wit. I am the one who knows about this.
You don't even know what the hell we're talking about.
I know EXACTLY what we're discussing, Goober****wit.
You didn't even know the word "anthropomorphization"
until I told it to you, and it's doubtful you even
really know what it means now.
Some animals experience disappointment
NO animals except for humans experience disappointment.
|