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Every creature that must catch its food for survival is born inherently aggressive by virtue of competition. Humans often think they can control this. We can take steps to take a creature of its environment, but we can't take environment out of the creature. It just so happens that most creatures on this planet fit this description and thus would be aggressive as an instinctual measure rather than being taught aggression by humans.
If you are trying to keep an animal from realizing its aggressive nature, it must be completely sheltered to the point where it doesn't feel threatened but there is no full-proof way to prevent an attack if the animal gets the idea that it's in danger. Just ask Roy Horn. No one can ask a siberian Tiger why it feels the need to kill. The reason is completely irrelevant as a tiger's perspective and a human's perspective simply isn't the same. There is no reasoning with a predator.
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