High Res  VIA:mod2amaryllis  Original:rjzimmerman  Reblog  107667 Notes

trapqueenkoopa:

leighalanna:

spcsnaptags:

creamsiclesquid:

rjzimmerman:


Upworthy carried a story summarizing an experiment demonstrating that rats exhibit empathy. Why do I care about this? Because the graphics showing the experiment on Upworthy made me smile, and smiling is good. Here’s the link in case you want to watch the video embedded in the story.

Some scientists ran an experiment to demonstrate that. Here’s how it worked:

  1. The scientists put a rat in water (which rats hate). Not enough to hurt the rat, but enough to annoy it.
  2. Then they put another rat in a safer, dry area with a door it could open to save the first rat.
image

When the dry rat heard the damp, miserable rat get upset, she came to the rescue.

image

Still not satisfied with the result, the scientists ran a more complex test.

What if you bribe the dry rat with food? Will she ignore it to rescue the wet rat in the next chamber?

Scientists presumed it would be easier for the not-in-peril rat to take the obvious selfless route when it was given only one choice. But what if they gave her a delicious bribe (chocolate cereal) and then let her choose between saving her friend and a buffet?

image

The rats, by a significant margin, still usually saved their friend before getting their delicious bribe. What does that mean?

Rats might care more about each other than things like food, and that prioritization might be encoded in their DNA.

Why should we care about super-thoughtful rats?

It is often argued that humans are inherently selfish — that without guidance, we would all default to killing and stealing and an “every person for themselves” mentality. That we only help others if it helps us. That evolution can’t make us selfless; it’s something we have to force ourselves to do.

But if rats show human-like qualities (they laugh like us, they dream like us, they like to have selfless lovers) like altruism, that means it isn’t a human-learned behavior. It could be encoded in our DNA. It means humans could be empathetic and kind by default.

It also means that rats and humans have more in common than we think.

image

An adorable rat not spreading the plague and hugging a tiny teddy bear. Much empathy.

mauther

TINY WONDERFUL BABBIES

Not my usual content, but important because of how many oppressive arguments rest on the presumption that supporting the well being of others is an unlikely, unreliable and antithetical to our nature choice.

^^^ this and also that rats are Good and Nice it’s just that omg cage cleaning

but mostly the ‘argument’ that being nice just isn’t in nature.

  1. cheloneuniverse reblogged this from fireyalex
  2. bonelotus reblogged this from because-of-reasons
  3. because-of-ghost reblogged this from because-of-reasons
  4. moonlitspires reblogged this from moonlitspires
  5. holersirup reblogged this from rjzimmerman
  6. nowlander reblogged this from theamazingsallyhogan
  7. t-rexseesyoursins reblogged this from soundssimpleright
  8. loudandclearnow reblogged this from loudandclearnow
  9. mpregnateyourocs reblogged this from dicksmasher
  10. mystmoon reblogged this from dicksmasher
  11. sirkflowers reblogged this from dicksmasher
  12. marlo-mallow reblogged this from dicksmasher
  13. that-barbie-boy reblogged this from dicksmasher
  14. dicksmasher reblogged this from ethereyel
  15. differenceenginegirl reblogged this from oysters-aint-for-me
  16. nyaranyaranya reblogged this from rockymaidenvixen
  17. rockymaidenvixen reblogged this from weregreatatcrime
  18. lakanakana reblogged this from ninzja
  19. sirma-m reblogged this from weregreatatcrime
  20. dildo-cornucopia reblogged this from weregreatatcrime
icon WHATCH OUT FOR SHARKS!
shark // 25 // they/them ☆ what if i WANT the vampires to hurt me. what then.