Something New we can blame our parents for. Ok maybe not our parents, but how about the parents of our parent's, parent's-parent's-parent's-parent's times many more.
It is so sad to think we would kill something out of fear, or to find it pleasing that a animal that never personally did us harm was killed only because it lived near us or passed by us.
I would allow the kids to walk up to a snake in the wild, before I would let them walk up to a strange dog anywhere.
I would never have a issue if someone wanted to kill billions and billions and maybe even trillions of ticks and mosquitoes, I can also accept the killing of invasive-non indigenous snakes, but lets leave our native snakes alone. After-all, our ancestors issue with snakes was more than a few years ago.
From Psychology Today;
Why You Hate Snakes
Presents the scientific theory that we are predisposed to acquire fears of critters that once threatened our ancestors' lives.
'Evolutionary memories'; Psychologist Susan Mineka and psychologist Michael Cook; Putting the theory to the test; The search for evidence.
By PT Staff, published on March 01, 1992 - last reviewed on June 20, 2012
They hiss and they slither, but they pose less of a threat to our lives than cars or ovens. So why do snakes set off more clinical fears and phobias than knives and guns?
Here's one scientific theory: Humans and other primates are predisposed to acquire fears of critters that once threatened our ancestors' lives.
Psychologist Susan Mineka. of Northwestern University contends that we have a predisposition to such memories" because our ancestors once had to face snakes, certainly more so than, say, ovens.
Because they survived, those who rapidly acquired the fear were most favored in nature.
Mineka, along with University of Wisconsin psychologist Michael Cook, put the theory to a test in six rhesus monkeys. Reared in the lab, the animals had no prior exposure to snakes.
The psychologists showed a videotape of wild-reared monkeys reacting with horror to snakes. Within 24 minutes, the lab monkeys acquired a fear of snakes.
The psychologists then edited fake flowers, a toy snake, a toy rabbit, and a toy crocodile into the video.
Tests later showed that after 40 to 60 seconds of exposure to each object, the monkeys feared only the toy snakes and crocodiles. Of the four objects, only snakes and crocodiles preyed on our ancestors.
Coincidence?
Meanwhile, the search for evidence continues. The next time snakes inhabit your nightmares, ask whether it's that viper horror you watched, or are you just connecting with the fears of your forefathers.
I must be missing some of my ancestral DNA because not only do I not fear snakes, I have a deep passion for them.
Or maybe Jeanne is right, I am just weird
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