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The fox doesn't attack. It doesn't bite. It doesn't howl at night like a wolf. It simply disappears. Hunters track it for hours. The dogs lose track. The traps are empty. And the fox sits three hundred meters away, watching. For centuries, people couldn't understand it. That's why they made it a symbol. In Japan, a god. In Europe, the devil. In fairy tales, the one who always wins. Not by strength. Not by speed. Something we can't name. But biology has an answer. The fox's brain processes information in a way that scientists compare to solving math problems. It hears a mouse under half a meter of snow and jumps to that exact spot—without missing a beat. It remembers thousands of food hiding places scattered across kilometers of terrain. And it recognizes a human face. Not a dog's. Not a wolf's. A human's. Today we'll take a look at how the fox's mind truly works—and why this animal survived everything that tried to kill it. 00:00 The Fox Everyone Knows—But No One Really Knows 02:30 Where Did the Image of the Cunning Fox Come From? 06:00 Body Structure—Tail, Ears, Senses 10:30 The Earth's Magnetic Field and Mouse Hunting 14:00 Fox Intelligence—What Can It Really Do? 18:30 Belyaev's Experiment—Fox Domestication in 60 Generations 24:00 Social Life—Family, Territory, Communication 29:30 What Does a Fox Really Eat? The Myth of the Chicken 34:00 The Urban Fox—Live Evolution 38:30 The Fox in Culture—Aesop, The Little Prince, Kitsune #fox #animals #interestingfacts #animalworld #naturefacts