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- Newsgroups: rec.pets.dogs
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!hellgate.utah.edu!lanl!beta.lanl.gov!crs
- From: crs@beta.lanl.gov (Charlie Sorsby)
- Subject: Re: On the breeds' original purposes
- Message-ID: <1992Dec26.032638.16890@newshost.lanl.gov>
- Sender: news@newshost.lanl.gov
- Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
- References: <1h4omqINNhqt@CS.UTK.EDU> <168C48E50.CBARNES@tamvm1.tamu.edu> <1h5965INN2v1@CS.UTK.EDU>
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 03:26:38 GMT
- Lines: 142
-
- I probably won't have time to do this topic justice at the moment
- but may have more to say later. For the time being, I must comment
- (briefly, I hope) on this particular post.
-
- To begin, *all* breeds evolve, sometimes radically, sometimes for
- better sometimes (more often, *I* believe) for worse. Sometimes
- the original purpose of a breed continues to exist; sometimes it
- does not. To compare circumstances for a breed whose original
- purpose still exists with on whose does not is, at best, comparing
- apples with oranges.
-
- In article <1h5965INN2v1@CS.UTK.EDU> primeaux@carlsberg.cs.utk.edu (David Primeaux) writes:
- = |> >entirely rhetorical, since she is spayed.
- = |>
- = |> yes. (that's assuming you have correctly defined the purpose of
- = |> dalmations for us. I don't know anything about dalmations.)
-
- All of the following will use various sporting breeds (my interest)
- as examples. I will leave it to you to contrive analogous
- situations for your own favorite breed or group.
-
- While, the purpose of Dalmations (as described by David (?) is,
- arguably obsolete, that is not true of the sporting breeds, at
- least as far as potential use is concerned. (It is true of some
- sporting breeds as far as the breed is concerned--the breeds have
- been changed to satisfy the whims of people who (apparently) neither
- know nor care what decades (or centuries) of breeding tried to
- accomplish.) The American Cocker Spaniel *as a breed* is a case in
- point. I say "as a breed" because there are (as I understand it)
- lines that retain the instincts that the breed was developed for.
- But, by and large, the breed has deteriorated to ornamentation.
- Enough people didn't care enough about the history or purpose of the
- breed and arbitrarily changed it to satisfy a whim: The preference
- for excessively feathered animals.
-
- In some cases, breeds have split into to, or even more, sub-breeds.
- The Golden Retriever, the English Setter, are cases in point.
-
- It is frequently mentioned, if not preached, here and elsewhere,
- that is it *wrong* to breed a dog that is unlikely to "improve the
- breed." Too often, this phrase is taken to apply only to
- superficial qualities--appearance. For those of you who *don't*
- believe that it is wrong to breed dogs who lack the instincts for
- which the breed was developed, please explain to me how that
- differs from breeding dogs who lack the *appearance* that is
- characteristic of the breed.
-
- To be more specific, why is it worse to breed a dog that is, say,
- an inch taller or shorter than the breed standard specifies than
- it is to breed a "bird dog" that lacks bird sense?
-
- I guess that my view is that, if the original purpose of the breed
- has disappeared, it *may* be acceptable to permit its purpose to
- evolve but if that purpose continues to exist, it is definitely
- *not* acceptable to do so. If you don't care enough about that
- breed to want to perpetuate *all* of its characteristics, find
- another breed.
-
- = The "in effect serving the same purpose" seems a bit slippery to me, despite
- = the example Chris gives. Let's get back to dalmatians, for example. And let's
-
- I assume that, here, you are saying that cases exist where Chris's
- comment is difficult to apply, not that Chris's example is
- "slippery."
-
- = for the sake of argument that the original purpose of the breed was to run for
- = long distances alongside a carriage. Being a carriage dog is perhaps a trifle
- = archaic, agreed? So we have a breed whose original purpose is passe. Some might
- = argue that the breed is no longer needed (I won't, and apparently Chris won't
- = either -- although I hesitate to put words into his mouth). Others might argue
- = that the breed is needed so long as someone somewhere is willing to still get in
- = a carriage and run these dogs so that they can be tested (with regard to original
- = purpose) for fitness to breed. Another alternative is the one that I *think* Chris
- = might champion is that they should be tested in performance of some task that is
- = "in effect serving the same purpose." Running alongside cars is one such task
- = that comes to mind. In my mind this would present a clear and evident danger to
- = such dogs, I don't want to be unfair about the issue. What would a safe, suitable
- = task "in effect serving the same purpose" be for a dalmatian?
-
- Perhaps one should ask *why* they were bred to run alongside
- carriages. Was it purely ornamentation? Was it to guard the
- occupants from highwaymen? What? Until that question is resolved,
- the "morality," if I may call it that, of breeding dogs unsuitable
- for that task and the development of suitable alternative purposes
- cannot be properly decided.
-
- Incidentally, I should think that, under similar conditions
- and at similar speeds, it would be no more dangerous for a dog to
- run alongside a motor car than alongside a horse-drawn carriage--
- perhaps less so. I also find it difficult to imagine any sound,
- Dalmation-size dog, in good condition that would be hard pressed to
- keep up with a horse-drawn carriage for any distance that it is
- possible to drive such a carriage these days (and, perhaps, even
- for the distances originally involved).
-
- = My opinion: if the original purpose of the breed is archaic and the breed is
- = still valued for other purposes -- such as disposition or color or size or whatever
- = -- dogs of that breed can and *ought* to be bred with those values in mind.
-
- Does breeding for the orignal capabilities harm these "other
- purposes"? If not, why not keep the breed intact?
-
- = My opinion, one step further: if the original purpose of the breed is archaic
- = to some people but they still value the breed for other purposes (as above),
- = -- dogs of that breed can and *ought* to be bred with those values in mind. I point
- = out (*not* to start a flame war, but only to illustrate with a controversial example)
- = that some people consider hunting archaic (I have been known to hunt, so don't
- = bother flaming me for this observation.).
-
- It may be archaic in some eyes but it is still done and dogs are
- still used for the purpose. That some people *don't* hunt should
- be irrelevant to the issue of maintaining breed characteristics.
-
- Allow me to close with an analogous question.
-
- You claim that if the original purpose of the breed is "archaic to
- some people...dogs of that breed can and *ought* to be bred with
- those values in mind." If that is true, then why not permit
- breeding for other characteristics that "some people" may value?
- Why not, for example, permit spotted Labs or solid color
- Dalmations? Surely there are people somewhere who like Dalmations
- but would like one in, say, solid red. Should we not cater to
- these people and permit Dals of that color to be bred and
- registered? After all, it's only coat color. Why is it all right
- to forget about function but not appearance? Why, for that matter,
- are there people who would not *think* of breeding a dog whose
- appearance departs from that specified in the breed standard but
- who would not hesitate to totally disregard the function for which
- the breed was developed? Have we as a society become so obsessed
- with appearance that we will readily discard the function for which
- breeds were developed while blathering incessantly that we *MUST*
- *NOT* breed a dog whose appearance departs even minutely from
- accepted standards?
-
- I don't know about you, but *I* think that's sad.
-
-
- --
- Best,
-
- Charlie "Older than dirt" Sorsby "I'm the NRA!"
- crs@lanl.gov
-