Self-Preservation Behavior
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A Self-Preservation Behavior is a behavior that is intended to ensure the survival of a living organism.
- Context:
- It can involve mechanisms like pain and fear that motivate avoidance of threats and damage.
- It can involve responses like withdrawal from harm, protecting injuries, and avoiding future threats.
- It can involve release of hormones like adrenaline to enable fight-or-flight.
- It can be associated to Reproductive Fitness.
- ...
- Example(s):
- a Self-Preservation Instinct, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- Suicidal Behavior that actively threatens survival.
- Self-Harm that damages health and well-being.
- Self-Destructive Behavior that increases risks.
- ...
- See: Survival Instinct, Well-Being, Extinction, Fight-or-Flight Response, Dodo Bird, Survival, Defence Mechanisms, Self-Replication.
References
2023
- (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/self-preservation Retrieved:2023-7-18.
- Self-preservation is a behavior or set of behaviors that ensures the survival of an organism. It is thought to be universal among all living organisms. For sentient organisms, pain and fear are integral parts of this mechanism. Pain motivates the individual to withdraw from damaging situations, to protect a damaged body part while it heals, and to avoid similar experiences in the future. Most pain resolves promptly once the painful stimulus is removed and the body has healed, but sometimes pain persists despite removal of the stimulus and apparent healing of the body; and sometimes pain arises in the absence of any detectable stimulus, damage or disease. Fear causes the organism to seek safety and may cause a release of adrenaline, which has the effect of increased strength and heightened senses such as hearing, smell, and sight. Self-preservation may also be interpreted figuratively, in regard to the coping mechanisms one needs to prevent emotional trauma from distorting the mind (see Defence mechanisms). Even the most simple of living organisms (for example, the single-celled bacteria) are typically under intense selective pressure to evolve a response that would help avoid a damaging environment, if such an environment exists. Organisms also evolve while adaptingeven thrivingin a benign environment (for example, a marine sponge modifies its structure in response to current changes, in order to better absorb and process nutrients). Self-preservation is therefore an almost universal hallmark of life. However, when introduced to a novel threat, many species will have a self-preservation response either too specialised, or not specialised enough, to cope with that particular threat.An example is the dodo, which evolved in the absence of natural predators and hence lacked an appropriate, general self-preservation response to heavy predation by humans and rats, showing no fear of them. Self-preservation is essentially the process of an organism preventing itself from being harmed or killed and is considered a basic instinct in most organisms. Most call it a "survival instinct". Self-preservation is thought to be tied to an organism's reproductive fitness and can be more or less present according to perceived reproduction potential. If perceived reproductive potential is low enough, self-destructive behavior (i.e., the opposite) is not uncommon in social species. Self-preservation is also thought by some to be the basis of rational and logical thought and behavior.