Spoiler alert
if you haven't read of mice and men but seriously it's a old book and alot of movies.
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Lennie has some mental disability which is never full explained and he kills a puppy by loving it to much. He also kills the farmers wife when she lets him play with her hair. He wanted to play with her hair more but she tried to get away she began to yell and he shook her so hard it broke her neck.
I actually did a paper on this subject in college about how if humans only went by our instincts we wouldn't be able to control ourselves in situations such as seeing a pretty baby or seeing an attractive person or seeing something we want.
We would more likely try to kill eat rape or steal all the time.
I'll make this short. This isn't readily supported in research. It's observed that "cuteness" can increase aggression, much as hapiness can cause tears or celebration can result in the aggressive slapping known as a "high 5." there's no more reason to believe this is true than the theory we simply "go temporarily insane" or that we are overwhelmed by emotions so default to an aggressive "survival" response, or any other theory.
In short- This is a hypothesis not really a grounded one, and not a fact.
Otherwise when people see cute pets or babies they'd try to squeeze them till they die
if you haven't read of mice and men but seriously it's a old book and alot of movies.
.
Lennie has some mental disability which is never full explained and he kills a puppy by loving it to much. He also kills the farmers wife when she lets him play with her hair. He wanted to play with her hair more but she tried to get away she began to yell and he shook her so hard it broke her neck.
I actually did a paper on this subject in college about how if humans only went by our instincts we wouldn't be able to control ourselves in situations such as seeing a pretty baby or seeing an attractive person or seeing something we want.
We would more likely try to kill eat rape or steal all the time.
In short- This is a hypothesis not really a grounded one, and not a fact.