Hi

If others can tell Michael what he said, I'll have a go at it as well.

Perhaps Michael was saying (reading between the lines) that Marmosets behave 
that way (i.e., using twigs to get insects) in their natural environments, but 
would NOT behave that way in a different environment (i.e., a desert).

I can't wait to find out the correct answer!

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor of Psychology
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

>>> Paul Brandon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 21-Apr-08 11:58 AM >>>
At 11:55 AM -0500 4/21/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>Michael- You say, "I never suggested that marmosets live in the desert."  If
>so someone is posting in your name, methinks. Here is a quote directly from
>your post:
>
>"I do not expect marmosets  to  do the same in a desert environment void of
>twigs."
>
>That appeared to me to say that Marmosets lived in "a desert environment
>void of twigs". Don't know how I could have been so far off base.
>Tim
>
>Are you trying to tell me what I mean?

No, we're telling you what you said.
-- 
The best argument against Intelligent Design is that fact that
people believe in it.

* PAUL K. BRANDON                    [EMAIL PROTECTED]  *
* Psychology Dept               Minnesota State University  *
* 23 Armstrong Hall, Mankato, MN 56001     ph 507-389-6217  *
*             http://krypton.mnsu.edu/~pkbrando/            *
---
To make changes to your subscription contact:

Bill Southerly ([EMAIL PROTECTED])


---
To make changes to your subscription contact:

Bill Southerly ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Reply via email to