Well, I'm going to bow out of this thread on an upbeat and positive note!I said what I thought, big deal. If moderators can't take aa bit of critisism without locking threads or deleting posts then I give up. Not once have I removed bad words directed to me or arguments I disagree with on the forums I moderate. Personal attacks? So tell me, why was it okay in the past for me to be called an ######, anal and a few other less than nice names? Don't get me wrong, I have been called far worse things by far worse people, but it is the hypocrisy that annoys me.
We have tried Christian, many times. One day we can say I told you so There was a time when my complaints were listened to and the posts removed; something changed along the way.
When are you all going to listen to what we are saying??? We are simple being cautious to protect the future of the hobby, where is the problem with that?
I'll go back to 'raising' mantids now :lol:
Rob.
You have been here for a year, Phil I ceased to give advice on Hymenopus as no matter how much [good] advice I gave it fell on deaf ears. The same happened with Idolomantis. There are only so many times I will repeat myself, believe it or not.....That you, who have contributed nothing that I can remember to mantis care in this forum in the past year
Yeah Phil, she is one swell young laddie, isn't she. :wub: No offense James.Curses, Superfreak, best argument I've heard from the opposition yet! Kittens, huh? Good luck on Monday, luv!
1) I disagree. It hasn't been proven either way, I'm not sure of any research in the field of insect pain... but crustaceans have been researched and there has been some evidence pointing to morphine affecting them in a similar way as it affects vertebrates. My personal opinion is that they do feel pain. I don't think it can be proven either way, because the sense experiences from the point of view of an insect cannot be completely understood to my knowledge. I think figuring this out sometimes is influenced by our own empathy, because insects and other inverts do react to noxious stimulus in a similar way to vertebrates. I mean, sometimes I wonder if my pet Monarch Valentine, who is missing her front two wings, feels sadness because she cannot fly free... but that doesn't mean she actually feels sad, right? But if so, I'd like to think that I am cheering her up when I feed her and let her sit on my finger.1) Invertebrates do not have as highly developed a nervous system as vertebrates. The do not feel pain. Fish do. If youre not a biologist, dont even start with this argument.2) The "but other people do it all the time" argument belongs in the playground. Im shocked people still carry this mentality with them into the world. Funnily enough, whenever this topic is posted by an ordinary peon and not a moderator, it gets deleted instantly.
3) The feeding of live rats and mice (and sometimes birds and gerbils and bunnies...im sure even a kitten out there somewhere!) to reptiles or large fish or even insects isnt something thats encouraged here in Australia. Perhaps its our European roots, but feeders are killed quickly and fed fresh.
4) Seeing a video like this immediately has me drawing similarities in my mind with all those horrid "vs." videos on youtube. Is this really the image we wish to display to the viewing community?
I, personally, have no problems with feeding feeder fish to a mantis. Im just calling it as i see it. And as i see it, this shouldnt have been posted up to begin with but really shouldnt have caused such a stir when it was.
Back to exam prep,
- Olga
Hey, go for it Joe! Morphine on crustaceans, huh? I reckon that you think that Superfreak is wrong, then, when she says that you need a background in biology to argue her point? Unfortunately (or fortunately ), she is cramming at the moment, but I'm sure that she won't mind if I stick to a simple answer about insects not having a highly developed nervous system compared to vertebrates. As you know, there are several ways of measuring stimulus response in insects, and one is the Weber-Fechner relationships. There, you may remember, the magnitude of the stimulus effect on the frequency of action potentials of the sense cell is related to the log of the stimulus strength. This is covered in Murray Blum's Fundamentals of Insect Physiology (1985) Chap 7 and Marc Klowden's Physiological Systems in Insects(2002) Chap 11, but it is pretty routine stuff, available anywhere. And that relationship can only obtain due to the very limited ranges of mechanoreceptor response in insects. I imagine that that was what Superfreak had in mind, but like you, I am not a biologist, let alone an entomologist.1) I disagree. It hasn't been proven either way, I'm not sure of any research in the field of insect pain... but crustaceans have been researched and there has been some evidence pointing to morphine affecting them in a similar way as it affects vertebrates. My personal opinion is that they do feel pain. I don't think it can be proven either way, because the sense experiences from the point of view of an insect cannot be completely understood to my knowledge. I think figuring this out sometimes is influenced by our own empathy, because insects and other inverts do react to noxious stimulus in a similar way to vertebrates. I mean, sometimes I wonder if my pet Monarch Valentine, who is missing her front two wings, feels sadness because she cannot fly free... but that doesn't mean she actually feels sad, right? But if so, I'd like to think that I am cheering her up when I feed her and let her sit on my finger. Yeah, the negative response to this video had me going "lol wut"...
I promised mysef to ignore you, but since you've misinterpreted what I wrote, I have to address that.Some of your fellow European hobbyists, though, do not agree with your viewpoint. Kruszakus is up front in telling us that Peter and those who agree with him are cruel and that he is a better person than we. A comforting philosophy indeed. Christian is more subtle, so I am not sure whether the taste of disgust down his throat (reification!! ) is due to our failure to understand and therefor be converted to his argument or because he agrees with Kruszakus. That you, who have contributed nothing that I can remember to mantis care in this forum in the past year, would call allies with a similar record here (though Gurd sometimes has a pleasant word!) to press an argument that has failed in the past, suggests that you may have a deeper emotional investment in this than you know. Ite in pace!
Are you a biologist?1) Invertebrates do not have as highly developed a nervous system as vertebrates. The do not feel pain. Fish do. If youre not a biologist, dont even start with this argument.2) The "but other people do it all the time" argument belongs in the playground. Im shocked people still carry this mentality with them into the world. Funnily enough, whenever this topic is posted by an ordinary peon and not a moderator, it gets deleted instantly.
3) The feeding of live rats and mice (and sometimes birds and gerbils and bunnies...im sure even a kitten out there somewhere!) to reptiles or large fish or even insects isnt something thats encouraged here in Australia. Perhaps its our European roots, but feeders are killed quickly and fed fresh.
4) Seeing a video like this immediately has me drawing similarities in my mind with all those horrid "vs." videos on youtube. Is this really the image we wish to display to the viewing community?
I, personally, have no problems with feeding feeder fish to a mantis. Im just calling it as i see it. And as i see it, this shouldnt have been posted up to begin with but really shouldnt have caused such a stir when it was.
Back to exam prep,
- Olga
I'm sorry, Kruszakus, if I misunderstood you. I think you said, "Nevermind. I'm way better that doing something that cruel." This is "almost English" and doesn't really make any sense. Having been guilty of "almost French" and "almost German" myself on occasion, I can fully sympathize. I reckoned that you meant that you were a better person than someone who would do the described activity. Remember that in English, adjectives with an "er" suffix (I think that the Polish equivalent is "szy", no?) are aptly named "comparative," so I was correct in inferring a comparison. I'm sure that we would all like to hear what you really mean, so if you have a Polish friend fluent in English, maybe he could give you a more cogent translation. It is reassuring, though, to know that you are not feeding kittens.I promised mysef to ignore you, but since you've misinterpreted what I wrote, I have to address that. I did not say I'm a better person - I just said that I'm better than doing the activity described in this thread. I don't feel the need to throw every living creature in front of my mantids and watch the results of such a face-off.
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