you don't show the slightest humility about any potential alternatives to your own blindly fundamentalist dogma — Isaac
I think I'm just as right as you think you are.
But let's dissect your label for a moment:
fundamentalist: adjective, 1. relating to or advocating the strict, literal interpretation of scripture.
Well, there is no "scripture" I'm referring to. No religion I'm following. No god I'm appealing to. So that's just not accurate.
2. relating to or advocating strict adherence to the basic principles of any subject or discipline.
Well, I also strictly adhere to the principles of not murdering babies, not raping people, and not beating my spouse...so I guess not all fundamentalist attitudes are so bad.
That being said, I never maintained that there are no circumstances ever in which meat eating might permissible. My stance is that if you
can be vegan, due to your circumstances, then you
ought to, and that this applies to most people living in industrialized countries.
dogma: noun, a principle or set of principles laid down by an authority as incontrovertibly true.
a) I guess science could count as an authority in veganism? But I prefer to see it as a source of information...um, nope: no appeals to authority in veganism. And as stated above, I don't believe veganism to be "incontrovertibly true." There are exceptions. And when lab grown meat is available, that'll be an alternative to veganism. And I'm always open to new evidence or a good argument--just haven't come across any yet.
Naturalness and "doing things exactly like we always have for millennia" are not synonymous. — Isaac
You're the one who talked both about being natural and insisting on meat-eating cause it's a millennia old practice. But okay.
Your insistence on naturalness still makes no sense. I mean, you can read how the appeal to nature has been debunked in any logic 101 textbook.