PsychoSarah
Chaotic Neutral
What about the bowerbird for example?
?These birds attract mates with beautiful love nests
Would you say the male "owes" the female a beautiful nest? What does it mean to be a social species if the bird is not a good example of human obligation?
I find the sociological explanation itself a little dissatisfying since on the surface there are too many comparable examples of obligation on this level among animals, who simply don't recognize the concept of obligation with the sophistication of humanity. (No offence Fido)
The economy among penguins is certainly impressive, but it wouldn't be fare to equate it with humanity's moral or philosophical sensibilities.
I bring up animals so strongly because I don't think it means much to say "social species". At the level you mean, we couldn't have "paychecks" or "popcorn" much less a definition of obligation
Obviously, more intelligent animals are going to have more complicated concepts of obligation, with it also taking less and less from instinct and more from learned behavior. We happen to be pretty dysfunctional for a social species though.
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