Pet dog has sex change in rare operation after vets discovered she was a hermaphrodite

 Jack Russell Molly
 Jack Russell Molly CREDIT: SWNS

A pet dog has undergone gender reassignment in a rare operation after vets discovered she was a hermaphrodite.

Molly, a Jack Russell who was born with male and female parts, has made a complete recovery after undergoing the rare gender reassignment surgery.

Mary and Frank Finlay first took their puppy Molly to the vet when they noticed her unusual toileting behaviour.

 Jack Russell Molly with her owners Mary and Frank Finlay at home in Glasgow.
 Jack Russell Molly with her owners Mary and Frank Finlay at home in Glasgow CREDIT: SWNS

Ross Allan, a vet based in Glasgow, discovered she was intersex, with elements of both male and female external genitalia.

This was causing her “significant” discomfort and abrasions, so she underwent a “complex” operation to improve her quality of life.

Mr Allan said Molly, now around 18 months old, has made a complete recovery after the surgery last June.

Mr Finlay told BBC Scotland’s Kaye Adams Programme: “We got Molly in November 2015 and noticed that around the house she would squat to do her pees but outside she would lift her leg.

“I mentioned this early on in 2016 to one of Ross’s colleagues and they came up with the probability that she was a hermaphrodite, both sexes.

“They did MRI scans and X-rays, and eventually she was operated on in 2016. We still call her Molly.”

Intersex Jack Russell 
Intersex Jack Russell Molly CREDIT: PA

Mrs Finlay added: “We’ve seen no change in her behaviour. She’s still the same wee Molly and we wouldn’t be without her, she’s too precious.”

During the surgical procedure, Mr Allan found Molly’s internal sexual organs were that of a male, with testicles in the place of ovaries within her abdomen.

The complex surgical procedure involved removing her pseudo male sexual organ and forming a functional urethral opening where the female genitalia would normally be found.

Mr Allan, who works at the Pets’n’Vets Family’s Roundhouse Veterinary Hospital in Glasgow, said: “Molly was what is defined medically as a male pseudo hermaphrodite, or more commonly ‘intersex’.

“Her particular anatomy meant that whilst Molly appeared to be a female, closer examination revealed elements of both male and female external genitalia, and unfortunately this was leading to significant genital discomfort.

“If left untreated, this risked her developing a long-term and debilitating condition.

“We decided that the very best solution for Molly was to proceed with definitive surgery to create an anatomical situation which would avoid ongoing issues or discomfort.

“The surgery was a great success and Molly is much more comfortable and happier as a result.

“Intersexism is rare in pets and some cases will not require any treatment at all.

“In Molly’s case, it was a painful condition which was causing problems and surgery was an important step to ensure she was able to go on to live a pain-free life.”

“Please stop spouting nonsense theories about the meaning of consciousness” by Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry

Ikon Images / Alamy Stock Photo

May 4, 2017 (theweek.com)

Why do humans have consciousness? The arguments surrounding this question make it one of the most animated debates in contemporary philosophy.

One reason why consciousness so vexes academic philosophers is that a great many of them are atheists, and the reality of subjective consciousness frustrates an extremist but widely held version of atheistic metaphysics called eliminative materialism. This form of metaphysics takes the position that the only things that exist are matter and mindless physical processes. But in a world of pure matter, how could you have subjective, conscious beings like us?

To someone schooled in the great historical philosophical traditions — which have been largely dismissed following the adoption of post-modernism in the academy — this debate is immensely frustrating. In fact, much of the ongoing conversation about consciousness is self-evidently absurd.

“The scientific and philosophical consensus is that there is no nonphysical soul or ego, or at least no evidence for that,” writes philosopher David Chalmers. The New York Times backed him up, calling this a “succinct” summation of the status quo. Except that it’s not.

First of all, there can be no scientific consensus or evidence about nonphysical realities, because science is only concerned with physical realities. As for the “philosophical consensus,” well, anyone who knows anything about philosophy knows that there has never been such a thing and never will be. And even if there were, it wouldn’t mean anything, since philosophy is not a science; in science, an expert consensus does represent the state of the art of knowledge on a particular issue. In philosophy, it merely represents a fad.

So things are very open. But the debate is always presented as an alternative between two narrow and incomplete views: On the one hand, the materialist position that there is no such thing as consciousness; and on the other, Descartes’ view that we have a kind of “ghost in the machine,” a spiritual being living somehow “inside” of us, who gives us consciousness and mind. But, for example, to both Christian and ancient Greek philosophy (two of the most important streams of thought in philosophy), the “soul” is not a kind of ghost, but rather the form of the body, the uniting principle between mind and body.

Another argument on consciousness that enjoys a bit of consensus, especially lately, is that consciousness is an illusion. Our brain constructs models of the world around us and then tricks itself into believing that this is an expression of the world. The foremost proponent of this view is the philosopher Daniel Dennett.

But again, this view is literally nonsense. The concept of an illusion presupposes that there is a subjective consciousness experiencing the illusion.

Dennett’s last book, From Bacteria to Bach and Back made this “illusion” argument by pointing out that our brains ceaselessly construct and modify and process the “raw data” from our senses into a coherent picture. The idea that our brains construct a not-completely-accurate picture of the world for us is not exactly new. Scientists have known this for decades, and philosophers for literally millennia. Any child can notice it: What we see when we open our eyes is a composite picture made by our mind using data from both of our eyes, which is why there are optical illusions and why if you block out one eye and then the other you will see things differently than with both eyes open. And, yes, this is true of everything else we experience, not just sight.

But this is a complete non-sequitur. That our conscious experience is constructed by our brain does not in any way shape or form prove that consciousness is an illusion. If I say that I’m going to see Shakespeare’s Hamlet tonight, and you respond by saying, “That’s not true, because Hamlet never existed,” that fact would be irrelevant: I will still be sitting in a theater experiencing Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The fact that our consciousness is in a large sense a “theater” is important to know, but it doesn’t alter the fact that there is still “someone” watching the play.

In fact, this point could just as easily be taken as evidence for the existence of the spiritual world. Our brain ceaselessly constructs reality for us. Indeed, we only grasp reality through concepts, which are nonphysical realities. We only see a flower as red because we have a concept of the color red; there is no such thing as the color red in reality, only different wavelengths of light perceived by our nervous system and interpreted by our minds in such a way as to give us the utterly subjective experience of seeing something as red. In this sense, we have a much more intimate experience of the nonmaterial world of concepts, ideas, and the mind, than of the world of matter.

But the bottom line is this: Of course consciousness is not an illusion, since it’s the only thing that we have direct, unmediated experience of. I am conscious of these lines, as you are of reading them. As Descartes pointed out, it’s not just that consciousness is an illusion, it’s that it’s the only thing anybody can be certain of.

More and more, fewer and fewer people have read the books and learned about concepts that would have been regarded as utterly basic just a century ago. So continues the slow cultural forgetting of philosophical concepts and traditions that shape our lives. The world doesn’t just run on power plants and computers, it also runs on ideas. Liberal democracy, social democratic marketplaces, human rights, all those things are ideas before they are put in motion, and while they can run on autopilot for a while, they start breaking down when people forget how they work.

People shouldn’t say absurd things, especially when they are credentialed academics, and especially when those claims then seep into pop culture under the guise of “academic consensus.” This isn’t an argument for God; consciousness proves that matter is not the only thing in existence, but this does not necessarily prove there is a God. It’s an argument for logic.

(Submitted by Bruce King)

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“Slacktivism to Ontological Activism” by Robert McEwen, H.W., M.

 
     The Little Prince once said,  “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly.  What is essential is invisible to the eye.”
 
     The heart is the soul of the soul.  It is something beyond.  Not nameable.  Not definable.  It is on fire with infinite love.  Nothing is impossible to the soul.
 
     As we enter into the axiom of ontological Truth, the Absolute, we approach the soul.  The infinity of the universe.  The unknowable.  The intellect withers at the door way unable to enter this secret chamber.  I call this Ontological Activism.
 
    As we pay attention to the axiom of Truth being all there is, errors burn away.  We are left naked with only Truth.  This is Translation.
 
    An articulate vocabulary pronounces clear definitions.  Articulate language carves out the “sculpture  within the marble waiting to be uncovered.”  All attributes seen in mathematical and perfect relationship with the whole.  An everywhere existent principle.  There is no separation.  A  consciousness principle or wave that is everywhere at once at the same time!
 
  It feels sensuous~
 
    To qualify as an ontological activist you you must possess a quality of attention is a fine kind.  It is not lazy or slack.  It is laser sharp and hyper attentive to precise definition.  To be slack in this area is something that the Master “G” did not allow.  Thane was also a taskmaster in this regard.  If we are on the “High Watch” then this is all so the case.  Each of have the tools and ability to be a TRUTH ACTIVIST!  To deal with the Inner revolution in consciousness.  We begin this process  with the Axiom, syllogisms, and abstract thinking.   It iw with “words” and the “attributes they point to.  The invisible essence that is under and behind time, space and change.  The constant principle.  The flow of Being that connects all life as One Intelligence. You come equipped with the tools of Translation.
 
    Can you be, or do you want to be an  Ontological Activist Now?   Think about it!  It is the only time we have, and really the only worth while thing we have to do this life on planet earth, or in the universe…
 
Blessed Be.
 
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