Regardless of what you see on the outside, there's a different agenda working inside that feline brain, balanced between domesticated cuteness and the killer instinct. That face serves as a blank canvas on which we project our own ideas of what a cat is thinking - whether it's cute kittens striking seductive poses, Grumpy Cat scowling her way to Hollywood, or Henri, le Chat Noir, expressing existential world-weariness. One of the consequences of that is it has a rather unexpressive face." John Bradshaw is an anthrozoologist at Bristol Veterinary School and the author of Alan Peters / Basic Books "The cat's domestication is incomplete, in terms of its need to continue hunting and also in terms of its ability to socialize. is only a few thousand years old," Bradshaw told NBC News.
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