[ 소설 소재] 여자친구에게 차여서 or/and 자신이 인간과 다르다는 걸 인식해서 우울증에 걸린 긴팔 원숭이 보리; 인간 여성 사육사로부터 사랑을 받을 수 없어서 or/and 어둡고 비좁은 환경으로 이송되어 '자살'을 택한 돌고래 피터
멍청한 호모 사피엔스 종은 동물들을 관찰하며 그들이 인간과 비슷한 행동을 할 때면 놀라움을 내비치지만, 더 높은 차원의 외계인들 or 상위존재들 역시 호모 사피엔스 종을 볼 때면 철없는 아이들을 바라보는 것과 같은 감정을 느낄 것이다.
SBS] 동물농장 (20110522) 명장면 "외로웠어요" / 우울증 걸린 긴팔 원숭이 보리
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zb90wWyYbXo
https://bbs.ruliweb.com/etcs/board/300780/read/51009377
https://www.insight.co.kr/news/250712
돌고래가 물 속에서 ‘자살’했다
https://www.hani.co.kr/arti/society/environment/532499.html
돌고래 피터의 자살
https://post.naver.com/viewer/postView.naver?volumeNo=32231589&memberNo=48519940
https://m.blog.naver.com/dive_company/220035087807
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Howe_Lovatt
When she was in her early 20s, Lovatt lived on the Caribbean island of St. Thomas, where there was a laboratory to research dolphins. The director of the laboratory, Gregory Bateson, allowed her to observe dolphin behavior, and was impressed by her enthusiasm and diligence as an observer despite her lack of scientific training. While volunteering at the laboratory, she met John C. Lilly, a neuroscientist with the California Institute of Technology.[1]
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While volunteering at the laboratory, she met John C. Lilly, a neuroscientist with the California Institute of Technology.[1] He was building a research laboratory with funding from NASA and the United States Navy with the goal of speaking to extraterrestrial life forms. In order to simulate this situation he built a "Dolphinarium", a dolphin-house flooded with water, on Saint Thomas. There Lilly accommodated three dolphins, two females named Sissy and Pamela and one younger male bottlenose dolphin named Peter. All of them were taken from Marine Studios and had been co-starring in the television show Flipper. In 1964 the "Dolphinarium" was fully functional, and as Lilly was often traveling, he assigned Lovatt to train the dolphins.
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In smaller tanks, and since the building lacked sunlight and space, Peter quickly deteriorated and eventually ended his life by drowning. Dolphin activist Ric O'Barry explains, "Dolphins are not automatic air-breathers like we [humans] are... Every breath is a conscious effort. If life becomes too unbearable, the dolphins just take a breath and they sink to the bottom. They don't take the next breath."[1]
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Lilly
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