Do dogs know right from wrong?

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Short answer?
Nope. And that’s actually great news.

Dogs and humans do share a lot in common. We both learn from consequences (parking tickets are very motivating 😑), and we both form powerful associations through everyday experiences. A smell, a sound, a place—those things shape how we feel and what we do next.

But there’s one big difference that trips people up:

Humans operate with a moral compass. Dogs do not.

We think in terms of right vs. wrong. We carry values, intentions, guilt, and meaning around with us all day long. Dogs? They’re living in a much more practical, present-moment world.

As my mentor Jean Donaldson famously says, dogs are “completely and innocently selfish.”

Not selfish in a bad way—selfish in a biological way.

Dogs make choices based on:

  • What’s worked before

  • What feels safe right now

  • What comes naturally to them

That’s it. No moral debate. No inner monologue about disappointing you. Just information and survival.

Why This Matters (A Lot)

Think about the last time your dog made what you considered the “wrong” choice.

Maybe they ignored you.
Maybe they pulled.
Maybe they froze.
Maybe they lost their ever-loving mind over something that looked… totally harmless to you.

That frustration usually comes from one assumption:

They knew better.

But dogs don’t “know better.”
They guess based on past outcomes and perceived safety.

And when you shift that lens, everything changes.

If a behavior has a strong reward history—walking nicely, coming when called, leaving something alone—that behavior is more likely to show up again. Not because it’s right, but because it works.

Behavior follows reinforcement. Always.

What About Fear and Associations?

Remember that cozy smell from the oven example?
Dogs build associations too—but theirs are almost always about safety vs. danger.

Picture this:
You’re walking your puppy, minding your own business… and ahead is a large, unfamiliar garbage can.

To you? No big deal.
To your puppy? Unknown object. Could be dangerous. Abort mission.

So what do they do?

  • Pull hard in the opposite direction

  • Plant their feet

  • Freeze like their life depends on it

Because to them… it does.

This isn’t disobedience.
It’s not stubbornness.
It’s not your puppy being “dramatic.”

It’s a survival response.

Pulling = escape
Freezing = assess threat

Those behaviors are doing exactly what they’re designed to do.

How Dog Brains Actually Work

Dogs are operating on two core rules:

  1. Repeat behaviors that pay off

  2. Stay safe

That’s the whole system.

When you understand this, a massive weight lifts off your shoulders. Your dog isn’t trying to defy you, challenge you, or make a point. They’re responding to the world as they experience it.

And here’s the most important part:

If you want a dog who can move confidently through real life—stores, patios, sidewalks, busy environments—you don’t get there by teaching “right” and “wrong.”

You get there by teaching safety first.

When a dog feels safe, learning opens up.
When learning opens up, behavior follows.
And that’s how dogs learn to truly go anywhere.

Next up: how to actively teach your puppy that the world is safe—without pressure, force, or fear. Stay tuned. 🐾

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Be Your Puppy's Hero
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Jody Karow - CTC

Founder & Lead Dog Life Coach — Go Anywhere Dog®

Helping dogs — and their humans — master the social skills that make a Go Anywhere Dog®. Science-based. Play-driven. Boundaries without trauma®.

Jody Karow is the founder and lead trainer at Go Anywhere Dog® in Eden Prairie, serving families across the Minneapolis metro. With 20+ years of hands-on experience, Jody’s special sauce is social skills—the confidence, play etiquette, and emotional regulation that turn a good puppy into a Go Anywhere Dog®. Her method blends behavioral science with joyful practice: trust first, skills second, obedience that lasts.

Her work sits at the intersection of behavioral science, emotional intelligence, and real-world practice, helping families raise calm, joyful dogs who can truly go anywhere with them. Jody’s guiding principle is simple and unwavering: build trust before obedience. Because the best-behaved dogs aren’t managed—they’re connected.

When she’s not teaching puppies the art of polite play, Jody mentors fellow trainers, writes about dog-human relationships, and explores the trails around the Minneapolis metro with her own Go Anywhere Dogs by her side.

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