In relation to what? — Andrew4Handel
I was just making a general point in relation to my opening post concerning how close to nature a behaviour is. — Andrew4Handel
I said we shouldn't disregard our nature. Disregard means ignore or place little weight on.
Meaning we should take into consideration what we actually are like as biological and psychological creatures. That doesn't mean we should copy the behaviour of nature.
It means we should not give a false picture of ourselves on which to base a morality etc. — Andrew4Handel
And if, after consideration, you don't approve or recommend it, then you're basically taking an ethical stance. — Sapientia
Has a plant ever voluntary walked into your most merely for your pleasure? — Andrew4Handel
Nothing has a choice about whether it dies or not because that is inevitable. — Andrew4Handel
We have to exploit nature to survive. As a depressed nihilist I know what it is like to be unhappy with the state of life an nature. It certainly is not Disneyland. — Andrew4Handel
It is unfortunate but dead animals are part of the cycle of life and part of most organism nutrition. — Andrew4Handel
I would say I had preferences rather than a moral stance. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think moral ideas can be non natural because that stance is meaningless. — Andrew4Handel
I am not sure what moral stance you are attributing to me. — Andrew4Handel
Okay, but that's just semantics, — Sapientia
The moral stance that I'm attributing to you is that eating meat is acceptable because of X, Y, and Z — Sapientia
True enough. But how does that justify killing someone? — NKBJ
Even if you think I have strong moral opinions that does not mean I believe they relate to existent moral facts. — Andrew4Handel
What I have been saying is more like meat eating isn't a moral issue. — Andrew4Handel
I have gone into great detail about about why I don't accept the naturalistic fallacy. I am waiting to hear where you can find a morality that doesn't reference nature. — Andrew4Handel
If I was a god and created a world then I imagine it would be odd if I didn't put any moral guidance in nature. And If nature wasn't a moral guide, there is nowhere else we know of that transcends nature etc. — Andrew4Handel
Why do you say "someone"? Can we not stick to talk about killing animals for food? There are lots of reason why we a won't kill a fellow human. — Andrew4Handel
Why do you why do you say "someone"? Can we not stick to talk about killing animals for food?
There are lots of reason why we a won't kill a fellow human. — Andrew4Handel
Being part of nature means that what we do is not unnatural. — Andrew4Handel
The justification for killing an animal is because you eat hungry and want to eat it. What justification due you have for asking people to live like herbivores? — Andrew4Handel
I think humans hypothetically have a lot of potential for however long they live and losing a human is a far greater loss than losing a cow. If Einstein and a cow were drowning I know who I would save first. — Andrew4Handel
I sort of figured we'd have to sort this part out at some point. Kind of explains why we've been talking passed each other this whole time. I'm not sure what you would categorize non-human animals as, but animal rights theorists (including me) see them as persons, hence calling them "someone." They have everything one needs for personhood: intelligence, emotions, desires, fears, personalities, etc. — NKBJ
However, lucky for us, that is not the scenario we have when talking about veganism. — NKBJ
For me, ethics is not a motive. My motive is that I believe human beings identify as herbivores through our biology & physiology alone; regardless of how we identify through our behaviour. — XTG
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