Bladed_Crescent wrote:As you yourself said repeatedly, stupid animals get eaten. Well, this was apparently one of those stupid ones. See? Parsimony at work.
Two seconds stupid. Of course I expect some variation in the species, but not
that much -- not if they're regularly preyed on. Standards are high in the wild; a fraction of a second stupid is something I would believe in a creature that has any significant history of predation. The two seconds stupid creatures would've been eaten a long time ago. Being two seconds stupid here would suggest tauntauns do not regularly roam in wampa territory, or indeed, have had little evolutionarily recent predation. This has been my point all along.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:I have never seen this "shocked into inaction" phenomenon on the part of the prey animal. Admittedly, most of my experience of predator/prey interaction has been with blowfish specials, but the prey animal always at least tries to run.
Mammals are generally what I was referring to, I should have made clear from the get-go. Lower orders of species - such as your blowfish - are more likely to react as you predict, because their brains are more wired for automative instinctive behaviour than cognition/data processing, even to the extent that herd animals like deer, caribou, etc are.
This is not to say that higher animals can't or won't react instinctively, just that you will not always see the instant stimulus-response behaviour that you do in an animal with a simple brain.
Er... By "blowfish special", I meant nature shows in general, not ones restricted to blowfish. Mea culpa.
Actually, I
did have mammals firmly in mind when I wrote this, not just blowfish. You pretend that there do not exist mechanisms inside complicated brains for turning off behaviors that would conflict with other activating behaviors that are more important. There are.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:So, sometimes they do freeze (again, we come back to the deer example).
Again, the blowfish specials... sorry, the nature documentaries I've seen and the horses I've ridden don't support that conclusion. And no, we
don't come back to the deer example, because that's a
different situation requiring a
different response from both the predator and prey.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Even when it would mean that they'll end up dead, some animals will hesitate a moment, a second, an instant longer than they should. I've not claimed it's a consistent trait and I've agreed that it can be a (lethal) problem for the animal, but freezing up - or, as above, simple stupidity - is not proof positive of a "not born here" theory.
The only thing that the delay in the tauntaun's "two seconds stupid" shows
directly is that they have no regular predators, which given wampas are native to the region Echo base was, indicates that tauntauns are either (a) domesticated, or (b) not native to this area of Hoth, somewhere lacking large predators like the wampa. (The (a) conclusion was surpressed in some of my more recent messages, because the argument was focused on whether the tauntaun actually does have the flight reaction.)
Bladed_Crescent wrote:You say that, because we only see two tauntauns, that the sample is too small for us to tell anything of consequence. Bullshit. This restricted sample actually does tell us a lot about tauntauns because we have a framework for understanding animal behavior in general, and setting that knowledge against what we know about the Rebels stay on Hoth.
Two animals, out of a possible population of thousands is not a small sample? Huh.
Don't strawman me, fucktard. Of course two animals is a small sample. But even two specimens can tell you a lot.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Hypothetical: A colonial British expedition comes across an Indian maharajah who has just moved into a new territory along with his entourage, including two elephants. Oops, I guess elephants aren't a native population to India because they can't be domesticated that quickly.
Stop strawmanning, asshat. The hypothetical is not even remotely comparable. We know that Indians come from India, but the Rebels do not come from Hoth. Elephants used as war-mounts (or whatever) have to have been raised from childhood, which was not recent, therefore tame elephants imply elephant tamers that have been doing their thing to these elephants since childhood. Tame elephants do
not specifically mean that elephants aren't native to anywhere.
Secondly, if you read carefully, that's not the conclusion I reached. The
entire conclusion is
either the tauntaun is not native to Hoth,
or there is a human population on Hoth that tames tauntauns, and that's because tamed tauntauns imply tauntaun tamers existing
somewhere.
Closer hypothetical: An American expedition comes across a Brittish expedition that, from all evidence, has only been here two weeks. These Brittish persons are riding elephants. The Americans come to the conclusion that either the elephant isn't native to India, or there is a native population of humans in India who tamed these elephants as mounts before the Brittish arrived.
Note that although the "elephant isn't native to India" part of the conclusion is wrong, the entire conclusion is right, because it is in logical disjoint with the part of the conclusion that is right.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:The Rebels had only just set up a sensor net for detecting movement outside the base, the base commander comments on the meteorite activity as if it's a recent revelation, Han Solo is taking about bounties on his head as if he only dallied long enough to get the place set up, so the Rebels can't have been there more than a few months. Setting up the sensor net would be one of the top priorities in establishing a base.
Here's a wild and wacky thought: the base had been set up earlier, but not to that scale. (
Tales of the Empire features a short story wherein Rebels steal a power generator for the Hoth base and one of them mentions ongoing equpiment problems, so there was a Rebel presence on Hoth for a while).
How long is "a while"? Months? Years? These tauntauns have to be somewhere on the order of a decade old (perhaps five, maybe seven, likely ten, ect.). That means if they were starting from baby tauntauns, already knowing how to tame a tauntaun, they would need at least that much lead time to tame a set of tauntauns as mounts. Of course, if Hoth has no prior human habitation, the Rebels would have to figure out how to tame these tauntauns from scratch. That means a couple of tauntaun generations of handling them and figuring out how to use them as mounts. Though they might get lucky and get it right first try, realistically it would take several tauntaun generations at least to get usable mounts. How long do you think that'll take? Twenty years? Thirty? The Rebellion plain isn't that old.
This isn't even touching on the can of worms opened if the tauntaun isn't merely tamed, but domesticated to some degree.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Here's some more facts for you: the Rebels had extensive fortifications and an elaborate underground base, including barracks, medical facilties and docking bays - all of which would have had to be carved out,
From ice. Remember the princess's chambers?
Bladed_Crescent wrote:supplied with power,
From exposed cables running along the walls.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:etc etc. It would have taken a while to erect those, especially the installation of such large aboveground facilties as the Ion Cannon, the power generator, etc when their machines are having trouble working in the first place.
The base itself is a really huge ice-cave with bells. We have exposed cables hanging off of ice-walls, VIP chambers that melt when you turn up the heat, and the only place in the base where people don't regularly wear winter coats is in the medical unit. Echo Base was built by a faction whose power is still impressive compared to ours, yet it was definitely a rush job.
Figuring out how to tame an animal that has never been tamed before is not easy, or quick.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:They'd been there for a while; maybe not in that number, but Echo Base wasn't something they whipped up on the fly and just moved into. If the base had been on the backburner for who-knows-how-long, it's not inconceivable that personnel there managed to acquire and train tauntauns. A base that they might one day use isn't going to have a lot of urgency in getting their equpiment up to spec, so that leaves them with finding other means of patrolling.
Um, setting up sensors so that you can figure out if the enemy is about to appear on your doorstep and curbstomp your ass, I think, would be rather high up on the To-Do list when setting up a base. And like it or not, the base was still a rush job, no matter how you look at it.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:And the Empire only had a handful of Star Destroyers at its disposal because we never see more than that on-screen - supplementary sources that say otherwise are wrong, of course.
Nice strawman, fuckstick. The supplementary sources can make the assertion that the Empire has a shitload of Star Destroyers and make it stick, because nothing in the movies
contradicts that assertion. Yet, the same supplementary sources which make the assertion that the
Executor is five miles long does NOT stick, because the movies consistently depict it to be nineteen miles long, thus
directly contradicting that assertion.
Tauntauns, as depicted, are likely domesticated to some degree -- fully tamed, at the very least. This imposes some restrictions on their history on Hoth. Either there's a long-term, recent, and still existing human population on Hoth, or tauntauns were domesticated (tamed) elsewhere on a similar planet and imported. If the supplementary sources claim
both that Hoth has had no recent human habitation
and the tauntaun is native to Hoth, then at least one is wrong because the both of them together leads to a conclusion that
contradicts a higher canon. Choose one to drop.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:We only see that many, so that many is what they have.
Of course that's wrong - they had thousands, but we never see more in the films, just referred to in the supplementary material, so hey - guess the sources that say they do are wrong, right? I mean, the films are higher canon and the OT has only got a few dozen SDs in there.
Need more straw, scarecrow?
Of course there can be thousands of tauntauns in the Rebel's herd on Hoth, because the movies don't
contradict such a notion even though only a few are shown.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Just like seeing two tauntauns and extrapolating their actions to an entire unseen species is equally as dubious.
Certain states of nature demand certain consistencies in the tauntaun. A long evolutionary history of predation is one of them, which (if they're not domesticated) demands them consistently having quick responses to predators jumping on them. A single tauntaun standing two seconds stupid does NOT support the supposition that they have a recent history of predation, and can only undermine it, even if it's the only example you see. I've explained this above.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:I said, that it wasn't as definitive a boundary as such other things and that in light of evidence more overwhelming than two animals' behaviour, it was simpler to err on the side of the background material than saying "Nope - ain't right. Didn't run." and trying to contort a new theory that goes against everything but less than 30 seconds of screen time.
You can whine all you want. It doesn't counter the fact that what we
do see on screen, the
stronger canon, only
undermines what the supplemental sources say about the wampas' supposed predation on tauntauns.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Saying that tauntauns can't be from Hoth because one of them should have run is more of a grey area.
That you've only left out just about my
entire fucking argument behind me thinking that tauntauns aren't native to Hoth doesn't enter into it, does it, fucktard?
Here it is again, for the peanut gallery: The fact that Luke's tauntaun stands two seconds stupid when the wampa pops up and breaks cover
cannot support the conclusion that the tauntaun is native to this area of Hoth,
unless they are also domesticated. Indeed, that particular piece of evidence can only undermine the hypothesis that tauntauns are wild animals native to that region of Hoth, and given the close tollerances that animals with long histories of predation can be expected to have in this regard, this is strong evidence indeed. This means that they are either (a) domesticated, or (b) not from around these parts of Hoth, and possibly both.
The fact that the Rebels are using them as mounts indicates that the tauntauns are at least tamed. This implies tauntaun tamers. Did the Rebels themselves do the taming? Did they even have time to do the taming? Echo Base is only barely established at best, so a few months is likely, perhaps five years tops if we believe
Tales of the Empire. Is this long enough to tame tauntauns completely from scratch? Realistically, no. They might get lucky first time, but realistically, we should expect three decades to learn how to tame tauntauns well enough to accept a mount, assuming a tauntaun maturation of five to ten years. If the tauntauns are native to Hoth, then someone other than the Rebels must have tamed them, or taught the Rebels to tame them assuming they had the time to tame one batch themselves. Therefore, tauntauns being native to Hoth implies there are native Hothian tauntaun tamers roaming the ice planet of Hoth, perhaps in the warmer climes.
Luke was able to an abort an attempt of his tauntaun to buck him off. The control of ingrained behaviors is a hallmark of domesticated animals. This implies a tauntaun domesticator, and proper domestication happens over an even longer period of time than figuring out how to tame animals. Again, this implies tauntaun tamers.
(Although horses are not completely domesticated, we know that domestic horses (Equus caballus) we ride nowadays are different from the wild horses in the past. The last remaining wild species, the Przewalski's Horse (Equus ferus przewalskii), is genetically distinct from the modern domestic horse and has never been trained the way modern horses are. Modern domestic horses have controlable instincts.)
The evidence so far points to tauntaun tamers, either on Hoth itself, or a planet similar to Hoth that is the tauntaun's actual planet of origin. If we believe Piett's report that the Hoth system is devoid of human life (especially if supplemental materials agree with that assessment), then that excludes the possibility that tauntaun tamers are Hothian. That leaves only the possiblity that tauntauns are not native to Hoth.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:Furthermore, being a desert farmboy, I wouldn't place any money on Luke knowing anything more than the basics of tauntaun riding.
As a child, Luke had a dewback mount. Granted, it's not the same, but he had some experience with riding animals.
While some horse riding skills are transferable to camels, I don't pretend that I would be much of a camel rider without a fair amount of practice.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:I choose to give up the notion that tauntauns are native to Hoth, because at least the notion that Hoth has no long-term habitation is supported by Piett's statement.
That's your perogative, of course. I'm not trying to convert you, merely defending my own interpretation as you are doing with yours.
Of course you are.
Elfdart wrote:I think prey animals freeze for several reasons:
1) They're stupid.
Flies flee from sudden movement. I don't think stupidity is an obsticle here.
Elfdart wrote:3) They try to hide by holding pefectly still and trying to blend in.
4) When another animal nearby has been killed, they don't want to waste calories running away since the predator will be too busy eating to bother with them.
Adaptations. We're not considering actual adaptive traits here. We're considering whether we've seen this reaction when it is maladaptive.
Elfdart wrote:2) They are scared shitless and paralyzed by fear. It happens to humans, so why not other animals? That's the only explanation for why that wild pig didn't run from the crocodile.
Humans have such a wide rage of responses to fear, most of which would be maladaptive in the face of an actual predator, that our fear response has been unhooked from our flight behavior. Fortunately, our response to fear is trainable, so that a warrior can pick up a rock and throw it at predators.
Note that being paralyzed with fear, if it's to effect your items #3 or #4 below, is an adaptation.
As for the pig/croc case, your details are lacking.
Elfdart wrote:Luke's tauntaun had another problem: It was tame enough to let Luke calm her down when she sensed trouble. Maybe a wild, feral or unbroken tauntaun would have made a run for it. The animal also might not have wanted to abandon its master. Horses and mules often refused to leave their wounded or killed riders during battle.
It does indicate that there has been some domestication on the part of the horse or mule.