Parasitic awesomeness
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/DyeHard/story?id=2288095&page=1
from
JoeUser Forums
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/DyeHard/story?id=2288095&page=1
I think this article is the coolest thing I've read in a long time. Forget the sensationalist implication cats are responsible for everything we think, feel, and do. (Oh wait, that wasn't an implication. That was the damn headline. Effing reporters.) Focus on this: Cats host a 'parasite' that can infect rats (and other animals, but focus on the rats for now). When a rat is infected, its personality is changed drastically, making it more adventurous, less afraid of cats, and on the whole much easier to catch and eat. So why are they still calling it a parasite? That's a symbiont if I ever saw one. The cat plays the host, and in return the little buggers help it catch rats. By working on the rats brain chemistry or whatever they do.
You see, this is why Darwin's model doesn't work to explain all of evolution. The biological system is huge, and interactions between elements are way more complex than mating with/eating each other. We're not going to understand the whole thing any time soon, but isn't it amazing what you see when you start looking?
I think this article is the coolest thing I've read in a long time. Forget the sensationalist implication cats are responsible for everything we think, feel, and do. (Oh wait, that wasn't an implication. That was the damn headline. Effing reporters.) Focus on this: Cats host a 'parasite' that can infect rats (and other animals, but focus on the rats for now). When a rat is infected, its personality is changed drastically, making it more adventurous, less afraid of cats, and on the whole much easier to catch and eat. So why are they still calling it a parasite? That's a symbiont if I ever saw one. The cat plays the host, and in return the little buggers help it catch rats. By working on the rats brain chemistry or whatever they do.
You see, this is why Darwin's model doesn't work to explain all of evolution. The biological system is huge, and interactions between elements are way more complex than mating with/eating each other. We're not going to understand the whole thing any time soon, but isn't it amazing what you see when you start looking?
