I still think Marsha should paint a picture of a momma platypus nurturing
her young.



http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/09/09/1062902041512.html

Parer says baby platypuses usually stay with their mothers only for four to
five months before venturing out on their own. Daughters stay close to their
mothers but the sons wander further afield.

"Females will know their daughters throughout their life, and the
grandmothers will know their daughters and their granddaughters," Parer
said.

"The males, like so many other species, disappear off into the horizon to
find a slab of river that's their own."


Backdoor-holding John




On Sun, Sep 5, 2010 at 1:49 PM, Krimel <[email protected]> wrote:

> [John]
> What's so bad about platypi?  Friendly creature, capable of nuzzling her
> young, even without teats.  How cute.
>
> To me, the scariest cosmos is where everything fits together nice and tidy
> and there's no room for creative exploration and innovation.  A closed
> system is a castle in the air.
>
> And what is wrong with co-dependent arising?  I thought you liked the Tao?
>
> [Krimel]
> Cute or not they seemed to scare the willies out of Pirsig and it is odd to
> have his most devoted followers holding the backdoor open for them.
>
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