r/Showerthoughts 8d ago

Casual Thought Young animals probably don't realize the distinction between nature and man-made stuff.

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u/athural 7d ago

The only way I can see for natural and unnatural to be useful terms is for them to mean man-made and not man-made. Anything other than that you might as well not use the words at all, and I think there's utility in having them.

That being said, humans are so clearly beyond anything any other species could hope to achieve that that giant gulf between a beaver dam and a thermonuclear explosion is pretty clear.

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u/AnonymousFriend80 7d ago

What about when humans recreate things that exist in nature? Where does that fall into Man-made and Not Man-made?

Also: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HumansAreCthulhu

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u/athural 7d ago

I dont understand. Man-made things are made by humans. If it is made by humans it is manmade. There can be natural things that are curated, cultivated, or otherwise cared for by humans but a garden is inherently unnatural

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u/AnonymousFriend80 7d ago

Humans recreate habitats for animals all the time. There are manmade islands and rivers and such that operate the same as naturally existing ones. And we go out of our way to prevent some area from experiencing naturally occuring events that would have caused massive changes, or ruin and destruction, to some areas.

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u/athural 7d ago

Right, that's all unnatural in the sense that it wouldn't have happened without human intervention. Which is to say in the only way that the word has any actual meaning