Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism?Why was Wall•E the only remaining Wall•E unit?In WALL•E, why does everyone get thrown when the Axiom suddenly lists?Why does Auto wake up the ship's captain when EVE returns?Why was the Axiom located so far away from Earth?Why is EVE heavily armed and trigger-happy?Why did the hover-chairs deploy oxygen masks when the captain activated the Holo-Detector and the passengers went to the Lido Deck?Why do the robots on the Axiom keep the humans alive?

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Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism?


Why was Wall•E the only remaining Wall•E unit?In WALL•E, why does everyone get thrown when the Axiom suddenly lists?Why does Auto wake up the ship's captain when EVE returns?Why was the Axiom located so far away from Earth?Why is EVE heavily armed and trigger-happy?Why did the hover-chairs deploy oxygen masks when the captain activated the Holo-Detector and the passengers went to the Lido Deck?Why do the robots on the Axiom keep the humans alive?













83















Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism just like the plant? The cockroach possesses all characteristics sustainable in life as the plant with the exception of reproduction, although neither does the plant that has yet to show signs of reproduction.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 3





    I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

    – An old man in the sea.
    Mar 18 at 13:00






  • 1





    @Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 13:24






  • 3





    Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

    – AJFaraday
    Mar 18 at 15:23






  • 13





    @AJFaraday - Twinkies

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 15:46






  • 3





    @AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:54















83















Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism just like the plant? The cockroach possesses all characteristics sustainable in life as the plant with the exception of reproduction, although neither does the plant that has yet to show signs of reproduction.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 3





    I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

    – An old man in the sea.
    Mar 18 at 13:00






  • 1





    @Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 13:24






  • 3





    Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

    – AJFaraday
    Mar 18 at 15:23






  • 13





    @AJFaraday - Twinkies

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 15:46






  • 3





    @AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:54













83












83








83


2






Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism just like the plant? The cockroach possesses all characteristics sustainable in life as the plant with the exception of reproduction, although neither does the plant that has yet to show signs of reproduction.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Why didn’t Eve recognize the little cockroach as a living organism just like the plant? The cockroach possesses all characteristics sustainable in life as the plant with the exception of reproduction, although neither does the plant that has yet to show signs of reproduction.







wall-e






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share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 18 at 9:40









TheLethalCarrot

47.6k17253302




47.6k17253302






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asked Mar 18 at 9:38









Ms. CarbajalMs. Carbajal

425123




425123




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New contributor





Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 3





    I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

    – An old man in the sea.
    Mar 18 at 13:00






  • 1





    @Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 13:24






  • 3





    Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

    – AJFaraday
    Mar 18 at 15:23






  • 13





    @AJFaraday - Twinkies

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 15:46






  • 3





    @AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:54












  • 3





    I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

    – An old man in the sea.
    Mar 18 at 13:00






  • 1





    @Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 13:24






  • 3





    Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

    – AJFaraday
    Mar 18 at 15:23






  • 13





    @AJFaraday - Twinkies

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 15:46






  • 3





    @AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:54







3




3





I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

– An old man in the sea.
Mar 18 at 13:00





I marvel how with almost no references, someone managed to answer this. =D ;)

– An old man in the sea.
Mar 18 at 13:00




1




1





@Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 13:24





@Anoldmaninthesea. - There's lots of reference; several junior novels, an art book, a script and dozens of DVD features that mention EVE

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 13:24




3




3





Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

– AJFaraday
Mar 18 at 15:23





Plants represent the bottom rung of the ecosystem. If the planet supports plan life, then it can, in time, be inhabited by other forms of life. Strictly speaking, the cockroach should be dead by now, because what is there for it to eat?

– AJFaraday
Mar 18 at 15:23




13




13





@AJFaraday - Twinkies

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 15:46





@AJFaraday - Twinkies

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 15:46




3




3





@AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 16:54





@AJFaraday - I don't see evidence of lots of cockroaches, I only see evidence of three

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 16:54










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















138














As you can see from this DVD insert (describing the various robots and their primary focus) EVE is an Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator. Her main focus is to review organic, read plant organic, life on the planets that she surveys.



enter image description here



As such, a life-form other than a plant wouldn't register on her scanners.




You might want to note that on a purely personal level she absolutely does recognise the roach as a living being.




Eve finds the insect intriguing. Lowers her arm. The end separates into individual hovering sections...



Wall-E Script




But when she scans Wall•E and the cockroach together, she finds that they're simply "not what she was looking for" (e.g. plant life).




She let the roach get closer. The little bug intrigued her, and she let him crawl up her arm. WALL · E heard her emit a series of electronic beeps. She was giggling! The roach must have tickled her.



...



She slowly approached the shivering box. The cockroach ran down EVE’s
blaster arm and hopped onto his master. EVE’s blue light scanned WALL·E. NEGATIVE. He was not what she was looking for. She retracted her
blaster arm and glided away.



Wall•E - Official Junior novelisation







share|improve this answer




















  • 11





    Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 7





    I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

    – AxGryndr
    2 days ago






  • 17





    @Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

    – Chronocidal
    2 days ago






  • 14





    @Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

    – Valorum
    2 days ago



















64














Unlike a plant, a cockroach does not show that the planet has started to recover, just that it has not yet run out of food waste yet.



More importantly: "EVE" stands for "Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator" - as the name suggests, she is specifically designed to search for Flora, not Fauna, (i.e. to search for Plant Life, not Animal Life).






share|improve this answer























  • This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

    – Stark07
    17 hours ago


















13














It is commonly thought that cockroaches are uniquely capable of surviving even in a highly radioactive environment.



Therefore the presence of a cockroach is not an indicator of an envoriment being inhabitable, or even safe to be in.






share|improve this answer










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Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 6





    To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Mar 18 at 16:20






  • 8





    For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:52






  • 3





    @Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 3





    I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago












  • @TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

    – Mayavin
    14 hours ago










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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









138














As you can see from this DVD insert (describing the various robots and their primary focus) EVE is an Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator. Her main focus is to review organic, read plant organic, life on the planets that she surveys.



enter image description here



As such, a life-form other than a plant wouldn't register on her scanners.




You might want to note that on a purely personal level she absolutely does recognise the roach as a living being.




Eve finds the insect intriguing. Lowers her arm. The end separates into individual hovering sections...



Wall-E Script




But when she scans Wall•E and the cockroach together, she finds that they're simply "not what she was looking for" (e.g. plant life).




She let the roach get closer. The little bug intrigued her, and she let him crawl up her arm. WALL · E heard her emit a series of electronic beeps. She was giggling! The roach must have tickled her.



...



She slowly approached the shivering box. The cockroach ran down EVE’s
blaster arm and hopped onto his master. EVE’s blue light scanned WALL·E. NEGATIVE. He was not what she was looking for. She retracted her
blaster arm and glided away.



Wall•E - Official Junior novelisation







share|improve this answer




















  • 11





    Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 7





    I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

    – AxGryndr
    2 days ago






  • 17





    @Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

    – Chronocidal
    2 days ago






  • 14





    @Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

    – Valorum
    2 days ago
















138














As you can see from this DVD insert (describing the various robots and their primary focus) EVE is an Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator. Her main focus is to review organic, read plant organic, life on the planets that she surveys.



enter image description here



As such, a life-form other than a plant wouldn't register on her scanners.




You might want to note that on a purely personal level she absolutely does recognise the roach as a living being.




Eve finds the insect intriguing. Lowers her arm. The end separates into individual hovering sections...



Wall-E Script




But when she scans Wall•E and the cockroach together, she finds that they're simply "not what she was looking for" (e.g. plant life).




She let the roach get closer. The little bug intrigued her, and she let him crawl up her arm. WALL · E heard her emit a series of electronic beeps. She was giggling! The roach must have tickled her.



...



She slowly approached the shivering box. The cockroach ran down EVE’s
blaster arm and hopped onto his master. EVE’s blue light scanned WALL·E. NEGATIVE. He was not what she was looking for. She retracted her
blaster arm and glided away.



Wall•E - Official Junior novelisation







share|improve this answer




















  • 11





    Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 7





    I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

    – AxGryndr
    2 days ago






  • 17





    @Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

    – Chronocidal
    2 days ago






  • 14





    @Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

    – Valorum
    2 days ago














138












138








138







As you can see from this DVD insert (describing the various robots and their primary focus) EVE is an Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator. Her main focus is to review organic, read plant organic, life on the planets that she surveys.



enter image description here



As such, a life-form other than a plant wouldn't register on her scanners.




You might want to note that on a purely personal level she absolutely does recognise the roach as a living being.




Eve finds the insect intriguing. Lowers her arm. The end separates into individual hovering sections...



Wall-E Script




But when she scans Wall•E and the cockroach together, she finds that they're simply "not what she was looking for" (e.g. plant life).




She let the roach get closer. The little bug intrigued her, and she let him crawl up her arm. WALL · E heard her emit a series of electronic beeps. She was giggling! The roach must have tickled her.



...



She slowly approached the shivering box. The cockroach ran down EVE’s
blaster arm and hopped onto his master. EVE’s blue light scanned WALL·E. NEGATIVE. He was not what she was looking for. She retracted her
blaster arm and glided away.



Wall•E - Official Junior novelisation







share|improve this answer















As you can see from this DVD insert (describing the various robots and their primary focus) EVE is an Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator. Her main focus is to review organic, read plant organic, life on the planets that she surveys.



enter image description here



As such, a life-form other than a plant wouldn't register on her scanners.




You might want to note that on a purely personal level she absolutely does recognise the roach as a living being.




Eve finds the insect intriguing. Lowers her arm. The end separates into individual hovering sections...



Wall-E Script




But when she scans Wall•E and the cockroach together, she finds that they're simply "not what she was looking for" (e.g. plant life).




She let the roach get closer. The little bug intrigued her, and she let him crawl up her arm. WALL · E heard her emit a series of electronic beeps. She was giggling! The roach must have tickled her.



...



She slowly approached the shivering box. The cockroach ran down EVE’s
blaster arm and hopped onto his master. EVE’s blue light scanned WALL·E. NEGATIVE. He was not what she was looking for. She retracted her
blaster arm and glided away.



Wall•E - Official Junior novelisation








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered Mar 18 at 11:02









ValorumValorum

410k11129863209




410k11129863209







  • 11





    Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 7





    I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

    – AxGryndr
    2 days ago






  • 17





    @Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

    – Chronocidal
    2 days ago






  • 14





    @Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

    – Valorum
    2 days ago













  • 11





    Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 7





    I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

    – AxGryndr
    2 days ago






  • 17





    @Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

    – Chronocidal
    2 days ago






  • 14





    @Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

    – Valorum
    2 days ago








11




11





Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

– Sean
2 days ago





Given that she was scanning for vegetation on Earth, she should technically be a Terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator.

– Sean
2 days ago




7




7





I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

– AxGryndr
2 days ago





I don't totally agree with Sean. EVE's function, by design, could be Extraterrestrial, however after the events on Earth transpired, is being used Terrestrially. Using a robot in an unforeseen way would not change it's acronym.

– AxGryndr
2 days ago




17




17





@Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

– Chronocidal
2 days ago





@Sean She was on Earth, but from Space - beyond (extra) Earth (terrestrial). An "Extraterrestrial Vegetation-Evaluator", not an "Extraterrestrial-Vegetation Evaluator"

– Chronocidal
2 days ago




14




14





@Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

– Valorum
2 days ago






@Chronocidal - I read it differently. In my head, her typical role is to evaluate life on the various planets that BNL can get to in their exploration ships. Once Operation Recolonise was implemented, her role changed to periodically evaluating life on Earth. So she's a restasked EVE probe.

– Valorum
2 days ago














64














Unlike a plant, a cockroach does not show that the planet has started to recover, just that it has not yet run out of food waste yet.



More importantly: "EVE" stands for "Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator" - as the name suggests, she is specifically designed to search for Flora, not Fauna, (i.e. to search for Plant Life, not Animal Life).






share|improve this answer























  • This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

    – Stark07
    17 hours ago















64














Unlike a plant, a cockroach does not show that the planet has started to recover, just that it has not yet run out of food waste yet.



More importantly: "EVE" stands for "Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator" - as the name suggests, she is specifically designed to search for Flora, not Fauna, (i.e. to search for Plant Life, not Animal Life).






share|improve this answer























  • This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

    – Stark07
    17 hours ago













64












64








64







Unlike a plant, a cockroach does not show that the planet has started to recover, just that it has not yet run out of food waste yet.



More importantly: "EVE" stands for "Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator" - as the name suggests, she is specifically designed to search for Flora, not Fauna, (i.e. to search for Plant Life, not Animal Life).






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Unlike a plant, a cockroach does not show that the planet has started to recover, just that it has not yet run out of food waste yet.



More importantly: "EVE" stands for "Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator" - as the name suggests, she is specifically designed to search for Flora, not Fauna, (i.e. to search for Plant Life, not Animal Life).







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 18 at 10:58









ChronocidalChronocidal

1,994716




1,994716












  • This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

    – Stark07
    17 hours ago

















  • This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

    – Stark07
    17 hours ago
















This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

– Stark07
17 hours ago





This is important! Roaches are great at scavenging. Even in the current time, it is predicted that roaches can easily survive a nuclear holocaust.

– Stark07
17 hours ago











13














It is commonly thought that cockroaches are uniquely capable of surviving even in a highly radioactive environment.



Therefore the presence of a cockroach is not an indicator of an envoriment being inhabitable, or even safe to be in.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Mar 18 at 16:20






  • 8





    For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:52






  • 3





    @Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 3





    I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago












  • @TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

    – Mayavin
    14 hours ago















13














It is commonly thought that cockroaches are uniquely capable of surviving even in a highly radioactive environment.



Therefore the presence of a cockroach is not an indicator of an envoriment being inhabitable, or even safe to be in.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 6





    To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Mar 18 at 16:20






  • 8





    For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:52






  • 3





    @Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 3





    I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago












  • @TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

    – Mayavin
    14 hours ago













13












13








13







It is commonly thought that cockroaches are uniquely capable of surviving even in a highly radioactive environment.



Therefore the presence of a cockroach is not an indicator of an envoriment being inhabitable, or even safe to be in.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










It is commonly thought that cockroaches are uniquely capable of surviving even in a highly radioactive environment.



Therefore the presence of a cockroach is not an indicator of an envoriment being inhabitable, or even safe to be in.







share|improve this answer










New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday









amflare

25.1k885127




25.1k885127






New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered Mar 18 at 16:16









MayavinMayavin

1553




1553




New contributor




Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Mayavin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 6





    To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Mar 18 at 16:20






  • 8





    For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:52






  • 3





    @Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 3





    I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago












  • @TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

    – Mayavin
    14 hours ago












  • 6





    To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

    – TheLethalCarrot
    Mar 18 at 16:20






  • 8





    For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

    – Valorum
    Mar 18 at 16:52






  • 3





    @Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

    – Sean
    2 days ago






  • 3





    I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

    – Konrad Rudolph
    2 days ago












  • @TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

    – Mayavin
    14 hours ago







6




6





To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 18 at 16:20





To clarify are you saying that Eve did recognise the cockroach as a living organism but discounted it because of the nature of a cockroach?

– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 18 at 16:20




8




8





For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 16:52





For the record, cockroaches are particularly susceptible to radiation poisoning and would likely be among the first class of creatures to die in a nuclear holocaust

– Valorum
Mar 18 at 16:52




3




3





@Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

– Sean
2 days ago





@Valorum: Compared to (say) fruit flies, yes. Compared to (say) humans, it's precisely the opposite.

– Sean
2 days ago




3




3





I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

– Konrad Rudolph
2 days ago






I feel this answer should get more upvotes. The scene was clearly a nod to the fabled hardiness of cockroaches, and their alleged ability to survive natural disasters.

– Konrad Rudolph
2 days ago














@TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

– Mayavin
14 hours ago





@TheLethalCarrot Precisely. Note that it scans the cockroach more thoroughly than any of the inanimate matter around.

– Mayavin
14 hours ago










Ms. Carbajal is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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