Ed1wolf
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- Dec 26, 2002
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We dont really know for certain what these animals were doing. The articles seem to be anthropomorphizing their behavior. I doubt they knew that their young were dead at first, they were just engaging in their mothering instinct. They were just doing what they thought would help revive the young. Of course, later they may have realized and smelled that their young were dead. But there is no real evidence that they were "grieving". Even if they are grieving, that does not mean that they are moral beings or have a moral conscience. If those young animals had been killed by another orca or dolphin, the killer would not be ostracized or punished, thereby showing no evidence of a moral sense. Depends on your definition of soul. Because they are intelligent creatures they do have some soulish characteristics. They have some aspects of personhood, but do not have full personhood, like humans created in the image of a personal Creator.A female Orca whale that recently gave birth has been carrying it's dead newborn on her back for days with the entire family of Orca around her making stressful and grieving sounds in what can only be described as a funeral procession.
https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article215571205.html
Dolphins have been known to do this as well
https://www.adventuresportsnetwork....-discussion-about-whether-the-mammals-grieve/
If you are so certain that you have a soul, what makes you so certain that these animals do not?
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