Article 6BD23 What do horses feel at the Kentucky Derby? Mostly fear and pain

What do horses feel at the Kentucky Derby? Mostly fear and pain

by
Elizabeth Banicki
from US news | The Guardian on (#6BD23)

US audiences will be sold a tale of horses battling for glory and adulation at Churchill Downs. But the actual story is far more disturbing

For a horse, winning means nothing - they don't even understand the concept. Yet every May US horse racing sells a narrative to draw in the public. The story goes that a group of young horses are locked in gritty pursuit of Triple Crown glory. But trophies, money and adulation are all human-made abstractions. The main concern for a horse is survival.

To be clear, what people think horses' feel is not the same as what the horses themselves experience. This is what Dr Stephen Peters, a neuroscientist known for his work with both humans and horses, calls anthropomorphism: attributing human characteristics to an animal.

Elizabeth Banicki worked for two decades as an exercise rider in the horse racing industry.

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