Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
What is the myth of the crocodile bird? Is it true? Well?
In one of the Marble comic shows Luke Cage, they
talked about this bird, the plover. It's an Egyptian bird,
A small wading bird fearlessly enters the open jaws of
a crocodile to clean its teeth, feeding on decaying meat
between the reptiles fangs. It's first recorded by ancient Greek
(00:21):
historian Herodotus. The tale suggests a mutualistic relationship. Bird gets food,
crocodile gets dental care. Yet modern science offers a different verdict.
The story is likely a myth. Despite years of observation
in nature documentaries, there's no credible footage or verified scientific
account of such behavior. But as we all know so,
(00:42):
I like the term the absence of evidence is not
the evidence of absence. The Egyptian plover does exist, and
it does frequent riverbanks, but it shows no special interaction
with crocodiles, most likely the open mouthed crocodile's for otis saw.
We're simply thermal regulating, not inviting a dental cleaning. The
myth represents, though, a projection of human ideals onto nature
(01:03):
particularly desire for cooperation, trusts, and reciprocity and dangerous situations.
The image of a fragile bird helping a deadly predator
and escaping unharmed mirrors our longing for harmony amid threat.
It also reflects magical thinking or complex relationships are oversimplified
and to feel good stories. Philosophically, the crocodile bird myth
(01:25):
challenges a tension between mythos and logos, narrative versus rationality.
Humans are meaning making creatures. We often prefer poetic metaphors
over uncertain truths. The story endures not because it's factual,
but because it feels true. It speaks to the paradox
of vulnerability and power. It reminds us of Pascal's notion
(01:45):
that humans are reads fragile but thinking, and that survival
sometimes hinges not on strength, but on courage and trust
in the face of the unknown. So while the crocodile
bird may never clean teeth in real life, it lives
on as a powerful metaphor, a part cautionary tale and
the part dream of peace wherever danger lurks,