Do Cats Love Their Owners. For a long, long time, it has been said of domestic cats that they are very greedy animals, and only look for their humans when they need food. Nor do they wag their tails, lick people or jump up on their favorite humans like dogs tend to.
But the most remarkable evidence that cats love humans comes from the many documented cases where cats traveled hundreds or thousands of miles through places they’ve never been to find their owners. There’s a known fact that cats are predators and they use their senses a lot more than we humans do. Those that don’t (generally dog people), however, claim cats are selfish creatures who show no affection and think they’re better.
Cats may love people as much as dogs do, but they don't immediately bond and trust in the same way as their canine counterparts.
There’s a known fact that cats are predators and they use their senses a lot more than we humans do. In fact, research has shown that they show a similar attachment to their owners which is comparable to dogs. They found that cats have the capacity to form attachments to their caregivers in the same way that children and dogs do. While hearing is the sense that prevails more than anything else when it comes down to the way cats recognize their owners, they actually use a combination of all their senses to find out who’s who.