Male wolves are aware of the consequences of seeking sex from she-wolves under the alpha male's control. That is a far cry from an awareness of right and wrong.Many animals know when they have mis-behaved according to the rules of the critters they live with. An awareness of "bad behaviour" is conscience.
What you still don't get is this: Nakedness is a Jewish concept of the felt need to cover up (fig leaves, etc.) and by extension to conceal wrong conduct and motives; and thus the biblical concept of nakedness generates the image of being "clothed with righteousness." Right and wrong in this sense is alien to animal consciousness, despite their awareness of when they have antagonized rivals in their species or other species. Even apart from that, you keep overlooking the stories 2nd lesson, acquired "godlikeness." It is the combination of both lessons that is the point, a combination th;at denies you the right to draw an inference about human vs. animal "conscience" from the story.I don't confuse them at all, although they are related concepts. If you are not self-conscious, you are unlikely to have a conscience. I refuse to eat octopi (and I transfer that unwillingness to squid and cuttlefish). I really resist consuming anything that might be smarter than me.
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