'cause they don't have to deal with stupid people.
2007-06-05 05:58:54
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Not entirely correct:
"If you mean, "Other than humans, do otherwise healthy and reproductively-capable individuals of any other species perform actions foreseeably guaranteed to result in their immediate death?", the answer is NO. Violate any one of the conditions in the preceding statement, and the answer is YES. Sick or injured animals of many different types will act in such ways as to guarantee a speedier end to their suffering, and this appears to include whale beachings. Whale beachings are also one reason for the qualifier "foreseeable," in that it appears healthy whales may follow a sick leader when the latter beaches--as social animals, they instinctively trust their leader, which under most circumstances would not lead them to their doom, so their unexpected (to them) beaching cannot be considered genuinely suicidal. For that matter, a rabbit that walks out into an open field when there's a hungry owl nearby may be performing an action virtually guaranteed to result in death--but not foreseeably so. Nor would an animal that dies defending its young necessarily be considered suicidal, even if the enemy is something pretty much impossible to defeat; after all, the enemy might retreat if it doesn't seem worth the trouble, so sometimes defense works. "
2007-06-05 05:55:12
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answer #2
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answered by Yahzmin ♥♥ 4ever 7
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it is complicated to categorise animals killing themselves as suicide, even whilst they make a option to do some thing that takes their lives. Whales will sea coast themselves yet is it suicide? in all probability no longer, extra probable there is a few thing incorrect with them internally. I had a fish as quickly as that constantly jumped out of the fish bowl, actually 3-4 cases an afternoon. became into he committing suicide? particular yet we saved putting him returned and he saved leaping out. I placed him in a pond in our backyard and he continues to be in there. So he wasn't committing suicide, he became into attempting to get out of someplace that he did no longer desire to be. Now i could agree that they take section in passive suicide. for occasion, whilst 2 older canines stay at the same time and one dies. each now and then the different refuses to eat or drink until they die. So it sounds as though that they are depressed over the shortcoming of the different and reason themselves to die. besides the fact that, this will not be suicide and as a exchange an animal no longer wanting to eat or drink because of the fact they don't be attentive to the place the different is. So i could say no, they do no longer commit suicide interior the comparable way as people do. they only have a limited skill and attempt to alter some thing of their subject.
2016-11-26 01:13:09
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Evolution generally selects against organisms killing themselves off, for obvious reasons - if you do so, your genes don't get passed along, and the frequency of suicidal genes in the next generation drops (not a simple matter to say which genes can give rise to a suicide). Eventually, over time, a population should be left with no individuals with that capacity.
There are exceptions, like bees dying after stinging, but worker bees don't mate anyway, so they weren't going to pass on their genes in any way except by protecting the hive & queen to which they are related, and at any rate it wouldn't be considered the same as suicide if the bee never realized that stinging was going to kill it.
The thing about humans is that the human mind is perhaps the most complicated device on the planet. A lot can go wrong with it as it develops, and a lot can go wrong with it as it tries to integrate emotions, beliefs, experiences, and things like concepts of self all together. We have the capacity to feel perhaps most deeply of all the animals, and depression is therefore most possible in us. It is impossible for, say, a fish to get depressed because it just isn't feeling things on a very deep emotional level - its simple brain would not even allow it to be self-aware.
2007-06-05 06:14:20
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answer #4
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answered by ? 5
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It's a mindset that drives people to commit suicide. Therefore how are you going to apply that to animals? What were they thinking when the whales beached themselves? Or perhaps what were the deer thinking following each other right over a cliff? It's not like they leave a suicide note, but it's tough to differentiate whether it was on purpose or they are stupid and follow their herd mentality right over a cliff.
2007-06-05 05:54:48
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answer #5
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answered by jay k 6
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Because their minds are simpler, which means they don't actually take the stressed out thoughts and process them as good as we do. They also don't have a lot of things to stress out about because their nature is all the same, they can't talk, they all do the exact same thing. But since all humans are unique and we have our own thoughts, beliefs, and feelings, w tend to think we can play with others because they are not like ours, which could cause them, or you, to be very stressed out and commit suicide.
2007-06-05 06:00:49
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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They do not plan their suicide, under given adverse situation they exhaust them selves in quest of their needs, need fulfilled they live again, but if need unfulfilled they go flat out to get it and in the process either they may die of exhaustion or fall prey to others due to their wear ed out body. If you call it suicide than yes they do but ask them they will laugh at you.
2007-06-05 06:17:27
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answer #7
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answered by SATISH KUMAR N 3
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Lemmings don't commit suicide! That was Disney, the bastards. They chased them over that cliff to make the movie better, look it up
2007-06-05 06:06:46
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answer #8
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answered by ryoma136 4
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we don't have any reason to believe that animals can grasp the concept of death or mortality. they definitely fear injury or dangerous circumstances...but even chimpanzees don't understand that mortality is a permanent thing. i once read in The Third Chimpanzee, about a female chimp who was taught sign language...she showed a lot of distress when she was told that her infant had died. she understood the word "to die." but she kept asking if it was okay repeatedly, as if she didn't realize that to die means forever.
so i believe you can only commit suicide if you truly grasp the concept of death.
2007-06-05 06:07:48
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answer #9
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answered by s1duri 2
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Some do
The Walleyed Pike does.
Read the link.
2014-11-05 03:34:22
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answer #10
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answered by Tony from Sussex 4
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I have never seen a bear with phycological problems and that is the cause of suicide. They do not think and feel like humans do. Their parents do not abuse them or take drugs or anything else bad that humans do. Animals are not like us period, they do not become emotionally traumatized.
2007-06-05 05:57:42
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answer #11
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answered by Amber 3
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