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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Beasts and Brains

On Beasts and Brains\nThe hungry lion looks at his prey and his moth begins to act involuntarily as he narrows his crosshairs in on the oblivious lightsome bunny girl from around the corner. His eat up instinct takes oer and in a moments notice; the bunny resides in the power of the jungles belly. He didnt hurt his defenseless aliment or rape or beat ithe just permit his instincts rule his actions. He moreover asserts his strength when necessary, and wouldnt think to be cruel or to viciously crucify his lion peers. An brute cares about survival of themselves and at times their offspring. They dont torture on another, allow alone their own species. An animal cares about survival of themselves and at times their offspring. They dont torture on another, let alone their own species. As manhood we have utilise our brains for evil it seams like sometimes. We torture ourselves in more labyrinthine and sinister ways than should be tolerated. In all of our edification we h ave also become cruel. Both Ovid and Vonnegut agree that piece would be better off without in that respect complex brains, besides they cease to remember the truelove that our pesky brains can produce.\nOvid shows that humans both torture all(prenominal) other and are exceedingly foolish because of there brains. Ovid writes, the king is cruelthat she was raped?against her will, he reachs no heed, inflicts?a brutal burying in a cryptic ditch;?the sand heaped over her is heavy, thick (Ovid Book 4 Lines 237-240). The Kings daughter is raped against her will, and the king doesnt even car that this torture is happening to his own daughter. Similarly, Ovid writes of the impairment that humans must pay for being foolish on numerous accounts. He writes, And no council could dissuade?the mind of Pentheus. They cant tour of duty his rage;?their calls for calm dont frustrate him they abet?the force they would nullify: so have I seen?a torrent there where nothing curbed its coura ge ? full point rather peacefully no rage, no roar;? nevertheless where it had been dammed wher...

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