Quote:
Originally Posted by terminator
I'm a geoscientist.
I'm not here to convince you. However, I think it may have been you who said to elaborate on endorphins (death vs captivity) and I said the chemical reactions, which cause distress, in the brain exists during captivity but not in death. I think thats pretty straightforward and does not require elaboration.
Again, I'm not here trying to convince anyone, but rather airing my opinion.
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Understood, I was genuinely asking if there was a study regarding the positive and negative chemical reactions in the brain during captivity vs. the wild (I won't ask for vs. death, since the chemical reactions are obviously zero) and if you had a link. I'd be curious to read up on something like that.