Arch said:I think any animal, including cats (and humans) is capable of simply gorging themselves and being lazy - especially domesticates whose instincts have been dulled somewhat, and who have food on tap. Indeed, the one instinct remaining in some is probably to eat whatever is offered, in case there is famine tomorrow. In any population, there will those who are active and fit, and those who are lazy - it's just that in the wild the lazy ones would die.
We have a skeleton in our reference collection from a cat that died of vitamin A poisoning. Its owner, a little old lady, found that it liked liver, so indulged it with liver every day. The cat must have lapped it up, despite the fact that it was been slowly killed. Excess vitamin A over a long period leads to excessive bone formation around joints, fusing them, and eventually the whole cat just seized up. Now, it can't have known why it was getting stiff, although I think many animals do have an innate ability to self medicate if they can, but it happily ate a completely unnatural diet, rather than ever turn up it's nose at the liver....
Then that is a cat that doesn't know what's good for it. And not to say that it's good that it's died, and neither to suggest that there's any conscious way of knowing what's good for it, but if there is a subconscious way of a cat or any other animal for that matter, knowing innately what's good for it, self medication as you call it - then those animals will evolve forward and the actual genes of the cat that doesn't know how to self medicate will die out.


