English, asked by kggharipur9525866690, 11 months ago

What Does The Chimpanzee think of himself​

Answers

Answered by JAYADADI
3

Answer:

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In the wild, chimpanzees that see humans for the first time are usually terrified of humans and keep a wary distance. On average humans are bigger and taller than chimps and they wisely are afraid of a potentially dangerous large animal.

Researchers, like Jane Goodall, spent a lot of time imitating non-threatening chimp body language and behavior , and over time the braver chimps began to interact with her. Some were reasonably gentle and friendly, and some (like the large male she named Frodo would push her around and bully her, one time beating her so hard she was badly injured and her spine was fractured.

This aggressive behavior is much more common in males and less frequent in females, but in both wild and clinical/zoo/pet environments. When chimps learn that they are much stronger than humans they often see this as an opportunity to dominate humans. A chimp who thinks he can dominate the humans around him does not seem to think about the consequences of attacking a person when they become frustrated or enraged.

It’s kind of like having a 5 year old child who can’t speak and is prone to tantrums but is stronger than a power athlete, has fangs like a leopard and seems to have no moral inhibition to tearing someone’s face, genitals, or fingers off.

Chimpanzees can feel great love and warmth for people they are friends with, but they can also harm or kill those friends if they lose control.

Answered by kumariruby03986
0

Explanation:

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