home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!gatech!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!uw-beaver!news.u.washington.edu!sumax.seattleu.edu!sumax.seattleu.edu!not-for-mail
- From: sstover@sumax.seattleu.edu ( Wilde Dame)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Subject: Re: Do your cats know their names?
- Date: 22 Dec 1992 21:58:57 -0800
- Organization: Seattle University
- Lines: 19
- Message-ID: <1h8v71INN2g@sumax.seattleu.edu>
- References: <85524@ut-emx.uucp> <1992Dec21.215752.3248@zmax.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sumax.seattleu.edu
-
- Far be it from me to suggest that cats are anything less than completely
- sentient, intelligent creatures [Sheryl looks to make sure the cats are on
- the other side of the room and not watching what she is typing], but I
- think tone of voice has everything to do with whether a cat recognizes his
- or her name. Hemingway and Clio know who I am talking to when I use their
- names, but they don't respond when other people say them. I know I've
- developed vocal patterns for the way I say their names, and that combined
- with my voice is a recognizable signal to them that I am speaking to them.
- In that sense, they know their names. But no, Hemingway doesn't
- recognize the word when I and my lit class friends discuss Ernest
- Hemingway, and Clio doesn't bat an eyelash when someone mentions
- Cleopatra. Of course, it could be that she knows she isn't named after
- Cleopatra (she's named after the Greek muse of History) and therefore can
- hear the "e" in it which clearly means we aren't talking about her. :)
-
- --
- Sheryl Stover % If you ask me what I have come to do in the world,
- & Hemingway & Clio % I who am an artist, I will reply: "I am here to
- sstover@seattleu.edu % live aloud." -Emile Zola
-