Something You Should Know - The Very Excellent Reasons We Have a 7-Day Week & How Cats Became Pets
Episode Date: May 22, 2023As you know, you can’t tickle yourself. But if you are ticklish, anyone else can tickle you. So why is that? Even if you know someone is about to tickle you, it still tickles. Listen as this episode... begins with an explanation of how tickling works. http://www.livescience.com/3882-tickle.html Our culture – in fact the whole world lives on schedule of a 7-day week. Yet, the week is a totally artificial, man-made invention. Other ways of measuring time such as days, hours, months and years are related to the sun, the moon, the rotation of the earth and other things – but the week is all just made up. Yet it works so exquisitely well! Imagine life with the week. Your schedule would be a disaster. Here to discuss how the week came into being and why it is so important is David Henkin, a professor of history at the University of California at Berkley and author of book The Week: A History of the Unnatural Rhythms That Made Us Who We Are (https://amzn.to/3InCDwl) Are you a cat lover? There are millions of them. And even if you are not, you have probably lived in or spent time in a home with cats. Where did cats come from? How did they get to be household pets? And what’s really interesting is that having an indoor cat didn’t actually become a thing until the 1930’s. That’s an interesting story. And here to discuss all this is Jonathan B. Losos an evolutionary biologist at Washington University and author of the book The Cat’s Meow: How Cats Evolved from The Savanna to Your Sofa (https://amzn.to/41PpAe1). If you have valuables in your home, where is the best place to hide them? The freezer? A dresser drawer? No. There’s another place that burglars almost never look. Listen and I will tell you where that is. https://www.rd.com/list/where-do-burglars-look/ PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! Zocdoc is the only FREE app that lets you find AND book doctors who are patient-reviewed, take your insurance, are available when you need them and treat almost every condition under the sun! Go to https://Zocdoc.com/SYSK and download the Zocdoc app for FREE. The Dell Technologies’ Summer Sale Event is on, with limited-quantity deals on top tech! It’s the perfect season to power your passions during Dell’s Summer Sale Event. Save today by calling 877-ASK-DELL. Discover Credit Cards do something pretty awesome. At the end of your first year, they automatically double all the cash back you’ve earned! See terms and check it out for yourself at https://Discover.com/match If you own a small business, you know the value of time. Innovation Refunds does too! They've made it easy to apply for the employee retention credit or ERC by going to https://getrefunds.com to see if your business qualifies in less than 8 minutes! Innovation Refunds has helped small businesses collect over $3 billion in payroll tax refunds! Let’s find “us” again by putting our phones down for five. Five days, five hours, even five minutes. Join U.S. Cellular in the Phones Down For Five challenge! Find out more at https://USCellular.com/findus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, why you can't tickle yourself no matter how hard you try.
Then the seven-day week.
It's totally arbitrary, yet imagine life without the week.
It's impossible and it's universal.
Yeah, I'd say at this point,
it's a global timekeeping system.
There are no major societies that I know about
that don't count regular continuous cycles of seven days.
But that wouldn't have been true
if you'd asked me this question 200 years ago
or even 100 years ago.
Also, where's the best place in your home
to hide your valuables from burglars?
And how cats and humans became so close?
It's a fascinating story.
A key development in the interaction of people and cats
was the development of kitty litter,
which was only invented in the 1940s.
Before that time, the possibility of having a cat
that just lived indoor all the time was very difficult.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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to learn more. That's betterhelp.com. Something you should know. Fascinating Intel. The world's top experts. And practical advice you can use in your life. Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers. wondered is why is it that some people are so much more ticklish than other people and some
people aren't ticklish at all? I wonder this because I'm one of those people who is extremely
ticklish and that's not a characteristic that I enjoy or am proud of or probably shouldn't
be saying that because when people find out then they tick you, and it's not an experience I enjoy.
But what's interesting, too, is that no matter how ticklish a person is,
it's still almost impossible for anyone to tickle themselves.
According to Paul Bayes of the Institute of Neurology at University College in London,
it's because the brain is constantly predicting what is about to happen.
Our reaction to being tickled is actually a defense mechanism
that works as kind of a non-self detector.
The tickle reflex requires a certain amount of surprise.
When self-touch is expected, you don't feel threatened
and the reaction is not activated.
But even if you know
you're about to be tickled, if someone is coming at you and you know they're going to tickle you,
the element of surprise is still there because you can't predict the exact time or intensity
of the oncoming tickle. And that anticipation can actually intensify the ultimate feeling
of being tickled. And that is something you should know.
We have a lot of different ways to measure time.
Seconds, hours, minutes, days, months, years, decades, centuries.
And pretty much all of them have some reasoning behind them,
having to do with the sun or the moon or something.
Except one, the week. We have a seven
day week for no practical reason whatsoever. Yet imagine what life would be like without the week.
If you go to the grocery store every week, but we had no week, how would you express that or
understand that? Without the week, we would have to have some other way to schedule our lives. Hello, Mike. How are you? The Week, a history of the unnatural rhythms that made us who we are.
Hey, David, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Hello, Mike. How are you?
Great, thanks.
So I have to admit, I've never really thought much about The Week or talked about it as a topic of conversation.
What is it about The Week that makes it so interesting
and made you write a book, and why are we talking about this?
The Week has always fascinated me and partly why the week is because the week is a completely artificial unit of time.
It's not really based on any natural observable natural phenomenon and it's not a fraction,
neat fraction of any other larger unit of time.
It's totally conventional.
Lots of parts of the world never had it. So I've always been fascinated with this weird thing that
is the week. We sort of made it up. You can't see it. You can't figure out by looking at the skies
if you've lost track of it. And lots of societies did just fine with that one,
but we're so attached to it. So I've always been curious as to what it does for us or what it does to us
to have this very peculiar time unit in our lives.
Does everyone have a week? Is the whole, pretty much the whole world a week centric?
Yeah, I'd say at this point, it's a global timekeeping system. There are no major societies
that I know about that don't count regular continuous cycles of
seven days. But that wouldn't have been true if you'd asked me this question 200 years ago or
even 100 years ago. Lots of societies have not counted seven-day cycles or not counted continuous
seven-day cycles or only had cycles that were fractions of lunar months or things like that
Or didn't care about the number seven at all
So who came up with this where'd it come from?
It seems to have two origins. I'd say the primary origin is
Is Jewish the Jewish Sabbath practice?
So to have a Sabbath count required that you maintain
That weekly cycle That's one origin. The Romans also
observed a planetary week where they identified each day of a seven-day cycle with one of the
planets, including the sun and the moon as planets. That's where we get names like Sunday,
Monday, Moon Day, Tuesday, which is different, Mars, etc. So those are the two origins.
And those two calendar systems kind of met in the Roman Empire.
And then initially through Christianity spread to other parts of the world,
but not instantly and not evenly over the course of the next 2,000 years.
And as clearly as arbitrary as the seven-day week seems to be, it has stuck.
It works.
And it makes you wonder why.
I mean, it's been universally adopted, even though it's so arbitrary.
I wonder why.
Right.
You could interpret that as it's been imposed on all of us, or you could interpret, as I think your question implies, that there's some special utilities and special value to having a seven-day cycle.
Having a seven-day cycle doesn't necessarily mean that you rest one or two days out of seven, though that's typically how it's used.
But yeah, counting cycles of seven days last. So whether it lasts because it's been imposed or because of habit or
because of utility, I think is an interesting question. Well, I'm no biblical scholar, but
in the Bible, there is talk of God creating earth and then resting on the seventh day.
So doesn't that mean there was a seven-day week in the Bible? Well, there was and there wasn't within the Bible,
right? The Bible says that God rests on day seven, but doesn't say that then God observes a cycle of
seven days. It doesn't say then every seven days God rests, and doesn't say that therefore people
rested every seven days. And it's not clear from Genesis. I mean, if you just read the Bible from
the beginning, you'd have no sense by the end of Genesis that the story at the beginning is going
to lead to a calendar of seven days. You might think that if people wanted to commemorate God's
rest on the seventh day, they'd rest on the seventh day of every lunar month or the seventh
day of every year. It's only later in the Bible that there begins to be some sense
that that story of creation could be linked to a calendar. So, the creation story is part of
the meaning of the Sabbath for Jews and for Christians too, but it's not clear that that
is like the beginning of it. It's not clear that just because there was a creation story in which God rested on the seventh day,
that therefore people began observing weeks.
And in fact, there is no evidence that people used the seven-day week as a calendar system for a society
for many centuries after the Bible was written.
But since it has lasted so long, it has become part of
everything, what does it do for us? And does it get in the way of things, or is it just,
I mean, why does it, it continues on, so it must fill some need or some purpose?
I think it fills different needs and different purposes depending how it's used.
I mean, not all societies that have observed the week have made it into a cycle of work and rest.
But that is a primary thing that the seven-day week does for people,
is it prescribes a regular rhythm of taking off from work. As we all know and complain about, most of us don't
actually really get to take off one or let alone two days work every seven days. But that's one
thing that it could do for us. But it does all kinds of other things as well. What interests
me is that in the modern American experience of the week from the early 19th century on, it enables us to schedule things.
It enables us to schedule activities with friends, with family, and with strangers in certain patterns so that we wind up doing things every seven days or a certain number of times every seven days or a certain at a certain rhythm
every 14 days or every 21 or 20 I mean there's nothing that we do in patterns
of five days or 13 days but there are all kinds of things that we do in
patterns of seven and that enables us to schedule things with other people yeah
but what you said is so true that you know we do things
every monday we have a monday meeting we have a tuesday something else that it's it there are a
lot of things that fit pretty nicely into that weekly cycle that if you didn't have the week
you wouldn't have the cycle right and the cool thing is that some of those things are very very
general right they're communal they're shared like all of us do
a certain kind of thing on one day of the week and some of them are very idiosyncratic
you know your tuesday and my tuesday could be super different depending on what our therapy
schedule was or when our gym was open or what kinds of sports uh we'd like to watch or you know
whether we had a custody arrangement with a co-parent.
I mean, there are all these very individualistic things that create our sense of our Tuesday.
I was watching an old Seinfeld episode not long ago, and they were talking about the week and the
days of the week and that Monday has a feel and Tuesday has a feel and Saturday has a feel.
I've always felt that. I've always felt that days have a feel.
And without the week, they wouldn't have a feel because everything would be the same.
I totally share your experience.
In some ways, what got me interested in the week was my inability to explain exactly what that feeling was. And the Seinfeld episode to which you refer, if I remember correctly,
the only thing that I think is odd about it
is it makes Kramer sort of seem unusual or bizarre
for thinking that days of the week have a feel.
Whereas in fact, it's not just Kramer, it's all of us.
I think we almost all have some sense
of what a Tuesday feels like or what a Wednesday feels like.
And it's mysterious, but my sense is that if you dig deep into it, it has to do with schedules and
expectations of things. And the week as a scheduling device is what gives it that feeling.
Well, everybody must have that because there isn't a person alive, I don't think,
who hasn't said at one time
when the holiday throws the week off, you know, today feels kind of like a Sunday.
Well, everybody says that. Yeah. So when I began thinking about this,
that was the only explanation that people could give. They would cite that example,
which is, oh, on a four-day work week you know suddenly Tuesday feels like a Monday right or you know you take a vacation and suddenly your Friday
feels like a Saturday so it all had to do with the with the work and rest cycle
but sometimes when there wasn't the holiday you still felt like today
doesn't feel like a Wednesday and you didn't quite know why and so I think
that what was
really helpful for me in thinking about the week was to stop assuming that everything that the week
does is generated by this cycle of work and rest. Cycle work and rest is hugely important,
but then there are these other things, typically like things about Tuesdays and Wednesdays that
give it a feel that are not simply about how long we've worked since the last day we had off.
We're talking about the week, our seven day week, why we have it, what it does for us and why it doesn't go away.
David Henkin is my guest. He is author of the book The Week, a history of the unnatural rhythms that made us who we are.
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Since I host a podcast, it's pretty common for me to be asked to recommend a podcast.
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So David, if you take a moment and imagine life without a week,
it would be so different because we take a week off.
We go somewhere for a week.
We do things every other week.
If we didn't have that word, we didn't have that week,
imagine how, well, you can't.
It's hard to imagine how you would reference that.
Partly why it would be really different is because if you didn't have the week, you probably would come up with units of time that are fractions of a month or fractions of a year.
And because the week isn't, it kind of just stands alone.
And so does this completely different kind of work for us?
One thing, Mike, that you mentioned that I think is interesting is that we don't only use the week to divide one day from another.
We also use it to lump all the days together.
Like I'm going to do this for a week or I'm going to look back on the week that I had.
So we use it as a lumper as well as a splitter. So really,
it does so many things in our mental map of the passing of time.
Was the week always as it is now where there's the work week and then there's the weekend? I
remember there was, I don't know why this stuck with me, but there was an episode of Downton
Abbey where some people were over at the Abbey and they were talking about the week and somebody said well we could do that on the weekend or something and
old lady Grantham says what's a weekend right and and like she'd never heard of a weekend like is
it has that is that a new thing in the United States until the 20th century, Sunday was the only day of rest.
So the idea of a week end as being two days didn't really spread to most working people until the 20th century.
And it was largely the result of union agitation and of the depression and crisis of underemployment.
So before then, in the United States, the weekend was just Sunday.
So you could call it the weekend, but it wasn't as common an expression because you could
simply refer to it Sunday, the Lord's Day, or the first day of the week.
And so at what point did Saturday become another day off?
So in the 19th century, middle class workers often had half day on Saturday. Teachers often
had a Saturday off. School children had Saturday off. So Saturday is an additional day off or
partial day off was known to lots of people in the United States in the 19th century.
Sometimes people also had Wednesday as a half day from school, for example. So
there was some sense of there being other times of the week that were not as
linked to work, but it was not until the 20th century that it became the norm for
people to have a Saturday as well as a Sunday.
So I would say the 1930s would be a crucial transition where Saturday became a day off for a majority of people in the United States.
I know you talk about how the pandemic kind of disrupted the week
because every day seemed like every other day.
Talk about that.
The pandemic was interesting to me because all the comedy routines,
all of the memes, all focused on Blur's Day,
this notion that pandemic shutdown had unsettled our sense of our place
in the weekly cycle.
And my best explanation for it is that's just the cycle
to which we're actually most attached.
That's the one that requires our regular habits
to perpetuate.
All other cycles could be linked to other things,
especially day and night.
You can just look outside if you want.
But the week is a fragile thing.
If we don't have our regular seven day habits, if we don't do the things that
we're used to doing in the way that we're used to doing them, we get dislodged from our sense
of time more generally and the week is the best way of expressing that sense of disorientation.
Because the week is the thing that we're most, in some ways, attached to. We're most worried about
losing it because it depends on the frailty of
human record keeping. But we're also most attached because it's the one that makes the difference to
our lives. If you think today is the 16th and it turns out to be the 17th, it's probably not going
to cause you much inconvenience or much consternation. But if you think that today is
Wednesday and it turns out to be Tuesday, it's firstly going to make you miss all kinds of appointments and do the wrong things. But it also
is going to make you wonder whether you've just sort of lost track of time in some more fundamental
way. What's the future of the week? Do you think that when you have things like pandemics that
disrupt everything, do people begin to question it? It seems like people would just race back to it
because we have to have it.
If we don't have it, what do we have?
You know, like we were saying earlier, Thursday has a feel to it,
but the 10th of the month doesn't have a feel to it.
So you've got to have that.
I think you do have to have that, and I think the pandemic shutdown
showed us how attached we are to it. that? I think you do have to have that. I think this the pandemic shutdown showed
us how attached we are to it. The threats to the week I think don't come
from things like pandemic shutdowns. The threats to the week come from, and they
were in place much earlier, come from things like telecommuting, you know,
working from home, non-synchronized entertainment. So, for example, when I was a kid,
a lot of what people thought was the feeling of Wednesday or Thursday
had to do with what was on TV those days.
So that's gone.
It's gone except for sports.
But scripted entertainment is now asynchronous,
and work is often asynchronous or just irregular patterns.
So those are the things that might make the week
either less necessary or less powerful.
We also don't need it as much as a scheduling device
because our electronic calendars can hold appointments in place for us
without our relying on the regularity of a weekly meeting. So those
are the things that threaten the week. But I do think that you're right, Mike, that we cling to
the week because there's nothing else like it, because it does encapsulate somehow our sense of
being in time, and because it reflects all the social arrangements that shape our lives.
I do think that the weak is likely to survive.
The weak has been attacked before by the French Revolution,
by the Bolshevik Revolution.
It was even attacked a little bit by American big business
in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Each time, the weak survived unscathed.
One thing we didn't attack directly here, and that is why seven days? Why not six? Why not eight?
Why seven?
So there have been different answers given. Some people have speculated that it has to do,
maybe to do with the moon. That's, I think, a very unconvincing explanation to me because a quarter of a
lunar cycle is not actually seven. Lunations are closer to 30 days than to 29. So you might have
expected a moon-based fraction to be five or six. So I don't think that works. Some people have
suggested that seven is a mnemonically useful number, that once you get to larger numbers,
it becomes harder to remember all the constitutive elements. To me, that seems sort of plausible,
but I don't think it would account for why so many different societies had seven and so many
different societies didn't. So it really wasn't universal timekeeping system until relatively recently. Traditional
Christians, Jews, Muslims might say that seven is built into the fabric of the universe by the
creation story. One might argue that something about the psychology or the physiology of the
human body requires rest every seven days. Again, all these things are plausible, not the moon one,
but the other ones are all plausible, except they don't really account for why so many societies did
just fine without seven. They might account for why seven has stuck or why a couple of societies
agreed on seven in the first place. But as you can tell by my tone of voice, I'm a little agnostic
about the magic of seven. Well, I always enjoy talking about topics here on this podcast
that I never knew were topics of discussion. And this has certainly been one of them.
I've been speaking with David Henkin. He is a professor of history at the University of California at Berkeley.
And the name of his book is The Week,
A History of the Unnatural Rhythms That Made Us Who We Are.
And there is a link to that book in the show notes.
Appreciate it. Thanks, David.
Okay, cool. Have a great day.
People who listen to Something You Should Know are curious about the world,
looking to hear new ideas and perspectives.
So I want to tell you about a podcast that is full of new ideas and perspectives,
and one I've started listening to called Intelligence Squared.
It's the podcast where great minds meet.
Listen in for some great talks on science, tech, politics, creativity, wellness, and a lot more.
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And me, Melissa Demonts, for Don't Blame Me,
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you get your podcasts new episodes every monday tuesday thursday and friday i have to admit i'm Thursday, and Friday.
I have to admit, I'm more of a dog person than a cat person, but I've owned cats.
I like cats.
A lot of people own cats or have owned cats or will live in a house with cats.
And we've never really done a segment that explores the life and the world of cats and how they've come to be one of our favorite pets.
And how are they related to other felines like tigers?
Where did they come from? How did they get domesticated? And why?
And what is it about cats that people find so intriguing?
Well, here to discuss this is Jonathan Lawsus.
He's an evolutionary biologist at Washington University and author of the book, The Cat's Meow,
How Cats Evolved from the Savannah to Your Sofa.
Hey, Jonathan, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Well, thank you so much for having me here.
So what is a cat? Where do cats come from? Why are they here?
Well, that's an interesting question.
I mean, everyone knows what a cat is just by looking at one.
And it turns out that the first cat that was discovered in the fossil record, the ancestor of all cats, as far as we can tell, evolved about 30 million years ago.
And it pretty much looked like a cat.
Its legs were a little bit shorter than most cats. But if you saw one walking down the street, you would say, hey, looked like a cat. Its legs were a little bit shorter than most cats.
But if you saw one walking down the street, you would say, hey, that's a cat.
And so, I mean, I could give you the technical aspects of the anatomy that define members of the Thelidae, the cat family.
But essentially, a cat is a cat and no one's going to confuse one with something else.
And that's been true throughout the evolutionary history of this group. There have been variations, bigger and smaller, spots on the coat and so on.
Of course, there were the saber-toothed cats, but essentially they've all been cats.
And the cat family, how big is the cat family?
Well, today there are 42 living species. And I think people might be surprised to hear that, that there are
so many. Everyone knows the big cats. Those are the celebrities of the cat world, the lions,
the tigers, the cheetahs, and so on. They have their own week on National Geographic, and everyone
knows them. The little cats, though, which I'm defining as cats that weigh less than 50 pounds are much more common.
And I like to ask people, can you name species of cats less than 50 pounds?
And the two that people usually get right away are the ocelot and the bobcat.
But after that, people often are stumped. But there's all kinds of obscure cats that no one has heard of.
The tigrina, the ancilla, the marbled cat,
the Bornean bay cat, the rusty footed cat. So the cat that we think of when we see a cat,
did it evolve from these bigger cats or is it just they're related, but they took different paths?
Well, that's a great question. And scientists have been studying that for quite some time now.
And the consensus, it's pretty clear at this point that the domestic cat, which is what we call the species around us, technically Felis caddis, the domestic cat evolved from the African wildcat.
This is a species that is found throughout Africa and into the Arabian Peninsula and Western Asia. And they actually
look very much alike. I like to say that if you saw an African wildcat in your backyard,
your response would not be, what's an African wildcat doing in New Jersey? But it would be,
what a beautiful cat. I've never seen one quite like that. So they are very similar in their
anatomy and it turns out in their DNA as well. But it's very clear that that was the
ancestor of the domestic cat and that domestication probably occurred somewhere in the area called the
Fertile Crescent that stretches from Turkey, Syria, Israel through to Egypt and where civilization
really got its start, where people first settled down and lived in villages and agriculture developed.
And somebody said, let's go get that cat and make it a pet, or it had some other agricultural
purpose, or what was the path to domestication?
Well, the probable path, and this is actually very hard to study, actually, but what seems very likely
is that when people started living in villages and growing crops and agriculture really took off,
well, as you know, when farmers grow crops, there's the good season and the bad season.
So you grow as much food as you can when the seasons are right, and then you store the food for the rest of the year in granaries
or whatever. Well, when that happens, the logical, obviously what happens next is that rodents are
attracted. Mice and rats see this bounty of food in this building that they can easily, you know,
go through the walls. And so they start, the rodent population explodes. Well, in turn, African wildcats are no dummies.
And they realize there's all these choice, yummy rodents right there.
And so they are attracted to live around the villages.
But the important thing to keep in mind here is that animals have personalities.
This has been a very vibrant area of research in the last few years.
And by personalities, I mean behavioral tendencies.
Some cats behave differently than others just due to their predispositions, just like people.
And so to anthropomorphize, there might be some cats that are bold and curious
and others that are, you know, scaredy cats.
They're timid and afraid. So the ones that are bolder, using the term loosely, may have been
willing to go around villages to be near people to take advantage of the rodents. And those would
be the ones that benefited, that they would get lots of food to eat. And so they would have lots of kittens. And as a result,
the genetic mutations that are responsible for those behaviors would become more common in the
population. And so it would be a phenomenon that the cats that are willing to hang around people
do better. And in turn, people may have seen the benefit of these cats. So maybe they started
putting out a little food for them to encourage them to be around, or maybe they gave them shelter, a warm spot to sleep
at night or day when they were sleeping. And so this back and forth where the cats that were
willing to do this benefited, and then people encouraged it even more. And eventually the cats
were hanging around the village all the time, and maybe people started petting them. And you can see how this this co-evolutionary walk would lead to the African wildcat turning into the domestic cat.
So I get that, you know, cats serve a purpose, that having them around is good to help keep the rodent population down and all.
But cats, you know, compared to dogs, say, do seem more aloof, that they're not as clingy and happy to see people,
that they might be good to have around outside, but at some point, who was it that said, well,
you know, let's have them live here? Let me answer that in a couple of ways. First is that
the most likely scenario for dog domestication is pretty similar, that the curious or boldest
dog started hanging around people, and in this case, probably eating the scraps and the trash
and so on. But it probably occurred in a very similar sort of scenario. But it happened a lot
earlier. The archaeological record suggests that dogs may have been domesticated 15,000 years ago
or even earlier. The genetic data suggests it might have been closericated 15,000 years ago or even earlier. The genetic data
suggests it might have been closer to 30,000 years. So dogs have been domesticated longer
than cats have. And so maybe the difference is just due to time. But there's another possibility,
and that is that dogs are pack animals. And so somewhere during the domestication process, humans were able to substitute ourselves
as the alpha dogs, if you will.
That's a gross characterization.
And so we've been able to take over the lead and dogs have just adapted their pack living
behaviors and directed them towards us.
And so they may have been predisposed to become much more intimately involved with
people than cats were.
So that may explain the difference. On the other hand, there is this idea that cats are aloof loners, and that is not entirely true. It turns out that in places where cats occur at high
densities, they actually are very social with each other,
very amiable to each other. And in fact, they form groups that are very similar to the prides of
lions, that lions are famous for living in groups that are composed of related females. And these
females are extremely friendly to each other. They groom each other. They lie on top of each other. They
actually help raise each other's young. And the males, when they grow up, they leave the pride,
but the females stay put. So they're all related. And it turns out that in places where there's a
lot of food, cats will occur at high densities. And that food might be because people are just
putting food out for them, as happens in
many places around the U.S. and elsewhere. Or it may be in places where, like fishing villages,
where there are big piles of scraps that the cats eat. But in any case, the plentitude of food
allows the cats to occur at a high density. And they live in groups that are very similar to lion
prides. They're groups of related females that are very friendly to each other.
They groom each other.
They help raise their young.
They even sometimes serve as a midwife and help during the birth of the kittens.
And so they are very friendly to each other.
Now, there will be multiple groups of cats in one place, and they're not friendly at all to members of other groups.
But they are friendly to their own groups. So under some circumstances, cats can actually be very friendly to each other.
One last thing, there's some breeds of cats that have been developed that are extremely affectionate,
almost could be mistaken for dogs in ways. And so cats do have that possibility, but it has to be brought out. Well, I was going to ask because, you know,
when we think of lions, other big cats like that, that they do live in groups, they have,
that you seldom see them out by on their own, but domesticated cats seem to do just fine by
themselves. And maybe they could be social, but they seem to do just fine if they're not.
Well, the lion is actually the only wild species of cat that does that, that lives in groups.
The cheetah is somewhat of an exception. Brothers will band together to try to control a territory
and work together to control the territory and mate with the females within it. But with that
exception, there are no other wild species of cat that live in groups.
And so the fact that the domestic cat does this, at least under some circumstances,
is really an interesting parallel.
It's really true social living in groups and friendliness.
It's only the domestic cat and the lion.
And when did people in a big way start bringing cats in as pets and getting them
for their kids? And I mean, did that catch on pretty quick when this domestication started
a long time ago? Or is this more of a recent thing? Well, I want to answer that at two timescales.
Going way back in time of the first archaeological evidence of cats
and humans living together is about 10,000 years ago from an archaeological site in Cyprus,
an island in the Mediterranean near Turkey. But we don't know if that was a domesticated cat
or just a wild cat that had become somewhat tame. We do know that cats were domesticated by the time of the Egyptian
civilizations, that 3,500 years ago, we can see paintings on tomb walls and sculptures that
clearly reveal cats living in a domesticated way, wearing collars and going on outings with the
family and eating food underneath the table and so on. So historically, cats really
became pets, certainly by the time of the Egyptians. And the question is, did it actually
happen in Egypt or did it happen somewhere else? And then the cats came to Egypt. And we don't know
the answer to that. More recently, a key development in the interaction of people and cats was the development of kitty litter, which was only invented in the 1940s.
And before that time, the possibility of having a cat that just lived indoor all the time was very difficult.
And so most cats were indoor-outdoor cats and, as a result, were not as intimate family members oftentimes as cats are today. But since the advent of kitty litter, that's really changed the ability of people to have cats as pets that stay inside all the time.
If you were to, well, how intelligent are cats?
And I guess you need some barometer or something to compare it against.
So maybe dogs, but just a sense of like,
are they trainable? Do they know what we're saying? Are they, what, how smart are they?
Well, they're very smart. Cats are very smart animals as are dogs. And it's, you know, we could
get into this argument back and forth. It's a little bit of apples and oranges because it's,
it's hard to directly compare the two animals. And in particular,
part of the reason it's hard is because of dogs' nature, it's easy to do experiments where you can
test how quickly they learn because they love being rewarded, particularly with attention and
affection. And so it's easy to train a cat, sorry, to do an experiment to see how a dog, how quickly it can figure things out.
Cats can be a little more difficult to do these experiments, but people have done them. And it
turns out cats are just as smart as dogs, you know, as a chauvinist, I'd say even smarter than
dogs, but they're certainly very smart. They do know their names. They can tell when a person,
when the person they live with is talking to them as opposed to talking to
another person.
They can be trained, actually.
There are whole books on this, and it's not actually that hard.
It's the same principle that you train a dog.
You just reward them for the behaviors that you would like them to perform, and the reward
is food.
Cats are very food oriented.
So overall, cats are very smart.
They can figure things out
and they understand their names and other,
you know, you can do many different tests
and they show that they're very smart animals.
My dog is very food oriented constantly.
Yeah.
All the time.
Cats are even more so because dogs sometimes will settle for affection
and sometimes cats will, but if you really want a cat to do something, give the cat a treat.
I've always been more of a dog person because I've had several dogs growing up, but I did have a cat
and a rather amazing cat and what made it so amazing.
And I've heard other stories like this, that when I was like 12 years old,
my family moved to England for a year.
And the neighbor said, well, we'll take care of the cat.
Well, the cat didn't get that.
The cat kept going back to our house, and we had rented the house out,
and the people who were renting the house were getting really tired of that cat.
So they kept the cat out.
And finally, the cat ran away, just disappeared.
And we came home, and we didn't know this, and the neighbor said, yeah, the cat ran away.
Three years later, I walk in the house, and there's the cat sitting where its bowl used to be waiting to be fed. And I'm just floored by that, that how a cat, I mean, we have no idea
where it had been. It looked okay, looked well fed and it stayed. It came back and it stayed.
And I thought that is amazing.
I would have to agree with you. It was a great story. I have heard some stories like that. It does happen.
Cats and dogs are renowned for returning to their old homes when people move. That's very well established. But I've heard of stories of dogs and cats showing up several years later, just as you described.
There's an interesting, if I can take a tangent to that story, people, researchers have started studying pet cats to see what they do when they go outside.
And now in the United States, most people don't let their cats out, but some people do.
And it's more common in other countries.
And so the way they research this
is one of two ways. They either put a little tracking device on the cat, and you can then,
these days, you can just follow it where the cat is doing on your computer or even your cell phone,
and you get very accurate readings of where the cat is. And as a result, you can see where it's
wandering to, how far away from home it goes, and so on.
The other thing is researchers have developed little cameras that you put around the cat's neck on its collar,
and you can get the cat's eye view of where it's going and what it's doing.
And you can actually buy both of these now as commercial products, although researchers use higher quality ones. And anyway, there are all kinds of fascinating things about the behavior of
these cats outside. But the one that I think is kind of funny is there are a number of cases,
it's quite common that when Bill Smith tracks his cat, it turns out that it visits the neighbor's
houses and it goes in through the cat flap, or maybe the owner lets them in. And if they have
multiple homes and they will eat the will eat the resident cat's food,
and they'll just hang out there, and it's extremely common.
What about the seeming rivalry between dogs and cats?
Yeah, people, you know, some people think they're just natural enemies.
I'm pretty sure that's not true, but there is this animosity, it seems, between them.
What is that?
Well, in more wild settings or certainly in feral cats, cats that live outside all the time that are unowned,
dogs are a real threat because dogs are predatory animals and they are much bigger.
And if a dog and a cat get into a fight,
many times the cat will lose. Sometimes it can fight the dog off, but dogs can be a real threat in nature. And so it's understandable in a way that there is this instinct of cats to be wary
of dogs. And some dogs, some more aggressive dogs can be very, very aggressive towards cats.
So there is that.
On the other hand, in many households, dogs and cats get along very well.
And often a trick to that is when they're introduced when they're young.
And so it's quite common that people can have dogs and cats and they do quite fine together.
One interesting thing is that dogs and cats are able to understand each
other's signals that, like many animals, dogs and cats communicate with body postures and so on,
but they sometimes have signals that differ between species. The most obvious one is what
they do with their tail, that a dog whose tail is moving back and forth, wagging its tail, that's a friendly gesture.
A cat that's wiggling its tail back and forth, that's a gesture. I'm nervous. I'm upset.
Something not good is happening here. And nonetheless, the dogs and cats are able to
figure out what each other mean. Another example is that a common behavior of a friendly behavior of cats
is to touch noses. Anyone who's had multiple cats in their house has seen that. Dogs don't do that.
But when dogs and cats live together, sometimes the dog will figure it out and will engage in
nose touching with cats as a friendly gesture. So the bottom line is there are reasons why
sometimes dogs and cats don't get along, but oftentimes they can live together amicably. Well, you certainly know your cats. I appreciate you
sharing all this information. It's fascinating. I've been speaking with Jonathan Lawsus. He is
an evolutionary biologist at Washington University and author of the book, The Cat's Meow, How Cats
Evolved from the Savannah to Your Sofa. And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
And that's it, Jonathan. Appreciate you being here.
Well, you're very welcome. It's been a pleasure talking with you.
You probably have some valuables in your home that you would like to keep safe from burglars
should they break in and start looking for stuff.
If you stash your valuables in a closet,
a dresser drawer, or a freezer, you're actually making a burglar's job a lot easier because
that's exactly where they'll look. According to Michelle Boinkens of the National Crime Prevention
Council, the best place to hide stuff is in the laundry area because most crooks forget to look there. And burglars are also less
likely to spend a lot of time checking hard-to-get-to places that are above eye level. In other words,
if it's inconvenient for you to get to, it's inconvenient for them to get to, and probably a
really good place to stash your valuables. And that is something you should know. It would be a
big help if you would leave a rating or review at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Just takes a second and it means a lot to us. I'm Micah Ruthers. Thanks for listening today
to Something You Should Know. Welcome to the small town of Chinook, where faith runs deep
and secrets run deeper. In this new thriller, religion and crime collide when a gruesome murder rocks the isolated Montana community.
Everyone is quick to point their fingers at a drug-addicted teenager, but local deputy Ruth Vogel isn't convinced.
She suspects connections to a powerful religious group.
Enter federal agent V.B. Loro, who has been investigating a local church for
possible criminal activity.
The pair form an unlikely partnership to
catch the killer, unearthing secrets
that leave Ruth torn between her duty to
the law, her religious convictions,
and her very own family. But
something more sinister than murder is afoot,
and someone is watching Ruth.
Chinook.
Starring Kelly Marie Tran and Sanaa Lathan.
Listen to Chinook wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Jennifer, a co-founder of the Go Kid Go Network.
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