Los Angeles Times - November 25 2002

EDITORIAL

The Master and His Human


Some smart humans with pleasant scents and a largely
incomprehensible vocabulary have determined that over
thousands of years their species, through domestication
and interaction, changed the genetics of what would
become canines. The scientists, who have only two legs,
just reported their serious findings in the journal Science.
They believe that humans changed wolves --rescuing
them from a cold forest life of surviving paw to mouth--
by bringing these canny creatures into the warmth of a
house as domesticated dogs with their own toys, soft
beds and biscuit treats they needn't share.

The Science research suggests it was humans' idea to
serve meat in a bowl to former wolves who once had
to chase dinner. Now, this retired wildlife sleeps around
the house whenever it wants. The scientists say dogs
have learned to read human looks, gestures and
sounds; even puppies know how to do this from birth.

We can report exclusively here that this news
--considered hilarious in dogdom-- is traversing the
globe through bouts of coded barking from one
backyard to another. Although dog dialects and
accents differ by region, the rough translation of
these canine messages is: "It's still working perfectly.
They think they're training (set italic) us (end italic)!"

Humans' uncanny ability to learn from dogs was, like
many important advances, discovered by accident.
Legend says that thousands of years ago a portly
dog seeking a workout one cold morning delivered a
stick to an idle human. Instantly, the human knew the
trick. He tossed the stick away. The dog brought it
back. The human threw it away. Again and again. Even
when the dog fetched a different stick, the human
knew to toss it.

Since then, other animals have deciphered human
learning patterns. Even illiterate ducks have successfully
trained humans frequenting parks. The ducks walk up,
ask for bread and tilt their heads, waiting. Well-trained
humans know to stop and drop large quantities of bread
crumbs.

Training humans requires time -- and patience. Sure, all
it took was little puppy licks for humans to learn baby
talk. But generations of whimpering passed before
humans finally began cloaking cold floors in carpets.
Humans encountering each other still don't get the
sniffing protocol. And despite centuries of example by
all breeds during morning and evening walks, humans
still haven't learned where to do their business, though
most know now to clean up after the dog.

A growing cadre of conservative canines holds that
humans, though adorable when children, are stubborn
and quite simply untrainable as adults. According to
this orthodox interpretation of the stick-tossing legend,
the dog who discovered humans' apparent capacity for
learning was not seeking exercise. He was cold in the
cave and intended the stick for the fire.
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Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times
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