Some reflections on the laws nature has given us

Kim 2022-04-19 09:01:08

Sacrifice the interests of animals and use their experiments to benefit mankind.

Seemingly logical, is it in fact?

Of course not
the video shows us an example of denying this assertion. The assistant who assisted will in research, due to a mistake in an experiment, inhaled the experimental drug, and as a result, he contracted a strange virus and passed away. The experimental orangutan is alive and kicking in the war against humans. The conclusion is obvious: the same drug produces different effects in chimps and humans. Is there anything more ironic than this assertion that would deny that this pharmaceutical company used the same experimental method to make all of its drugs? Hahaha.

The human thoughts imposed on animals are vividly manifested in actions against human beings.
Will lives with the orangutan. Will teaches it to learn human knowledge and penetrate human minds. In fact, he is imparting human knowledge. Very interesting scene, I believe everyone will smile after watching it, wisdom is where our confidence lies. At the same time, however, orangutans also see negative human emotions, violence, and abuse. After that, it was clever and used this set of human methods to fight back against humans. Another bit of irony.

What do all these indicate? What are we after? There is something or a mechanism at work that keeps us from seeing the results we want.

That is, the law of nature. Great and profound laws of nature. A law of the way things works, we still need to explore and pursue, but we can't go against the way and get the opposite result. The original intention of human medicine is not wrong, and human beings also have objects of protection, such as our family members, all of which are worth cherishing and are positive and beautiful. Then whether the interests of animals should be sacrificed, or whether to use their bodies for experiments, the protection of animal rights and the comprehensiveness of professional knowledge still require humans to practice or explore. Animals have a reason for their existence, and I do not need to prove this assertion, because it does exist, when human beings delusionally impose human wisdom on animals. This is another topic worth discussing. Of course, the film uses violent realistic methods to deny this proposition. When the orangutan climbed the tree and led the beautiful panorama of the city, did we think about such a question? Let them return to their nature, maybe there, they can see the more beautiful scenery that belongs to them.

Will's father, when Will wanted to inject medicine for the second time, held his hand gently and refused. He passed away peacefully like this. Perhaps we can assume that he took the second drug, and then what happened. The effect lasts, then fails, or doesn't work at all? No matter what, death will come. why? This is what nature wants man to understand, and this is the great law. No matter how you try to change it, you must be convinced and followed in the end. Will's father chose to leave quietly. While he deeply understood this great law, he gave useful examples like Will told, showing the greatness and calmness of human beings, which really touched me.

Don't add to the characteristics of things that do not belong to it. While admiring the power of nature, you are silently obeying it. It seems a little sad, but it's not. Beautiful things are praised, and in the long river of history, they have been approved by nature, and the fragrance will last forever.

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Extended Reading
  • Jeffery 2022-03-22 09:01:06

    I have to say that American Hollywood films are really well made. Each orangutan is played by an actor and then processed in post-production. Therefore, the facial expressions of the orangutans are so vivid!

  • Addie 2022-04-24 07:01:01

    The first word of Caesar and the Anthropology Society was home, and he has been looking for home all his life. Home is not a prison cell, but a window painted on the walls of the prison cell; although it was born in a laboratory, its destiny is always in the jungle. When we meet again, there is no home. After the final battle, it returned to the jungle with its clan, and finally returned home. The posture of lying down on the soil is exactly the same as lying on the picture window of the prison cell. Pull the iron gate, climb the canopy, a planet of the apes is rising.

Rise of the Planet of the Apes quotes

  • [first lines]

    Robert Franklin: [administering chimp intelligence test] Okay, okay. Here you go. And let's go again.

    [gives Bright Eyes treat and clocks timer]

    Will Rodman: Which one's this? Number nine?

    Robert Franklin: Yeah, this is number nine. Bright Eyes, we call her. Are you watching this? This is unbelievable.

    [Bright Eyes does the tower fast]

    Robert Franklin: Oh, my God. Oh, my God.

    Bright Eyes: [grabs treat and eats it]

    Will Rodman: How many moves was that?

    Robert Franklin: 20.

    [Will looks at them and starts to head out]

    Robert Franklin: Yeah, a perfect score is 15. Doc, what are you giving her?

    Will Rodman: [heads out] Hey, give that video!

    [runs out the hallway and opens the door to Steven Jacobs' office]

    Will Rodman: Chimp number nine, just one dose.

    Steven Jacobs: [looks at Will and holds a phone down] Aren't I seeing you later?

    Will Rodman: [puts file on desk] We're good to go.

    Steven Jacobs: I'm going to call you back. Yeah, all right. Thanks. Bye.

    Will Rodman: The 112. It works.

    [walks to a large screen]

    Steven Jacobs: On just the one primate.

    Will Rodman: One is all we need. Full cognitive recorvery. We're ready.

    Steven Jacobs: Look are you sure you're not rushing this?

    Will Rodman: I've been working on this for five and a half years. The data is clear. We're ready, Steven. All I need is your approval for human trials.

    Steven Jacobs: For this, you're going to need the board's approval. There's alot of money riding on this, Will. You only get one shot.

    Will Rodman: One shot is all I need.

    Steven Jacobs: [sighing] All right. But I'll need to see all the research.

    Will Rodman: [bangs on the desk] You got it.

    Steven Jacobs: And, Will...

    Will Rodman: Yeah?

    Steven Jacobs: Keep your personal emotions out of it. These people invest in results, not dreams.

    Will Rodman: Okay.

    [leaves office]

  • Caroline Aranha: I love chimpanzees. I'm also afraid of them. And it's appropriate to be afraid of them.