Do Cats Think? Quotes
Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
by
Paul Corey105 ratings, 3.33 average rating, 25 reviews
Do Cats Think? Quotes
Showing 1-9 of 9
“I shall continue to quote Dr. Fox: 'But within the academic game of science it is all too easy for the researcher to lose himself in an irrelevant problem, in an intellectual mind-game that may give him the prestige of widespread scientific publication. And he may forget how many animals died for him on his ego trip. A man of science must also be a man of conscience and integrity, constantly assessing the purpose and ethics of his work, whether it involves animals or human subjects.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“Recently, Dr. Michael W. Fox, in his book, Understanding Your Cat, wrote: 'It is not anthropomorphic to say that the cat experiences emotions as we do. It is logical to conclude that they do since they have the same brain center for such feelings as we have.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“Behavioral scientists are not likely to agree, because such a performance can't be repeated with the true scientific method, under laboratory conditions. But the laboratory is a very limited place to learn anything but rudimentary facts about life and living.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“A cat probably doesn't say to himself, 'Where did I go wrong? Why wasn't I able to get my idea across?' More likely, Leo's brain reacted very much like the human brain in such a situation, and he thought, 'That damned stupid human. He's too dumb to understand what I was trying to say.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“If anyone asked why we decided to start a family when we did, I said, 'Most couples get kittens for their kids to play with; we decided to get a baby for our cats to play with.' That wasn't true, of course, but it was good for a laugh.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“Women often reason that an unspayed cat is a way to teach the facts of life to their children. That's what they say. Actually, it all boils down to a type of voyeurism, with more interest in breading and birthing than any true interest in children or cats.
The wife of someone we know refused to have their female cat spayed because, she said, "I want my children to watch the miracle of birth." When too many kittens accumulated, her husband took them up to the top of a mountain road near us and abandoned them in the brush.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
The wife of someone we know refused to have their female cat spayed because, she said, "I want my children to watch the miracle of birth." When too many kittens accumulated, her husband took them up to the top of a mountain road near us and abandoned them in the brush.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“But you can reassure children; you can tell them what's happening or going to happen. Can you get such reassurance across to a cat? I suppose it is that sort of anthropomorphism that bugs the hell out of researchers whose job is to experiment on nonhuman animals. If they permit themselves such a comparison, they might not sleep well at night.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“Why did he pick me? There were five other laps present, all of them more friendly than mine. It's that sort of coincidental behavior of cats that upsets people. It raises the question: did he know I was the guy who had to be won over? But won over to what?”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
“Any conditioned cat-hater can be won over by any cat who chooses to make the effort. Only an unregenerate ailurophobe can't be reached. I'd say he's really sick.”
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
― Do Cats Think?: Notes of a Cat-Watcher
