Easy. Animals have no rights and can therefore be used as property/utility by moral agents (i.e. humans). — Emptyheady
What properties do humans have that give them those rights? — Ovaloid
Would you be ok with being used as property/utility by beings with more of said properties? — Ovaloid
To which one can reply, as I would, that they do. — Thorongil
The exact same reasoning was used to justify racial discrimination, segregation, and extermination. — darthbarracuda
Your claims are controversial. Morally and legally speaking, animals do not have rights the way humans do. This is pretty much a consensus everywhere in the world. — Emptyheady
Yeah, no, this is completely wrong. Animals have rights, recognized across the (developed) world. Animal abuse is a thing because animals have rights. — darthbarracuda
Non-human animals might not be able to vote but they can certain suffer. — darthbarracuda
A species is a race on a larger scale though.Moral agency is not limited within a race nor gender. — Emptyheady
Come now... such a rash and lazy reasoning. The fact that you can abuse animals does not entail that animals have rights. You can also abuse buildings, plants (e.g. trees) and cars -- you can even get legally punished by doing so, but none of this entail "rights" like human rights.
Note that this is an otiose point. This specific point is regarding its controversy. It adds nothing to the crux of this discussion, but I found it interesting to mention nonetheless. I took some classes in law. The fact that animals have no rights was uncontroversially true (legally). The moral case is easily made as well. — Emptyheady
Suffering is not the basis of my moral philosophy. Besides, laws are more about rights than suffering anyway. — Emptyheady
We might have to discuss some metaethics at a deeper level, but if we agree that humans are capable of acting morally and animals not without equivocating, then we can take it from there. If you disagree, then we should look where exactly we differ and how humans are morally different from animals. — Emptyheady
Why do you think animals can't act morally? — Ovaloid
If there were a species which is better capable of moral agency than us, would you consider them to have more rights than you? — Ovaloid
You can't abuse something that doesn't have the right to not be abused — darthbarracuda
I disagree. The capacity to suffer qualifies something as morally important. Things have rights in virtue of the fact that they can feel, or are related to things that can feel. — darthbarracuda
Not being a moral agent doesn't mean one isn't morally important. We can't expect infants to act rationally or morally and yet we treat them with respect. And yet many non-human animals have a greater capacity of rationality than human infants. — darthbarracuda
Like a dog chasing its own tail. I am a bit tired at this moment, is this circular reasoning or just an tautology... — Emptyheady
As long as you are a human being, you remain to have moral agency and therefore human rights. That is because humans have a special property of moral responsibility -- call them moral agents or moral actors if you'd like. — Emptyheady
No, it's not circular reasoning. — darthbarracuda
And it is exactly this line of reasoning that I reject. You don't have to have moral agency in order to qualify for rights. — darthbarracuda
That defines the precise difference in scale and that definition of species had nothing to do with rights.Lol. Species have a very specific biological and taxonomical definition, which is rooted in reproduction. People from different races can reproduce, i.e. can make cute babies. There is a point where two (sexual) organisms can no longer sexually reproduce with each other, which have by that very definition become different species.
Don't waste time with this ignorant hollow twaddle mate. 'Species is a race on a larger scale though' Jesus Christ... — Emptyheady
Okay this is the last time you play this trick before I call it quits. Yes, it is circular reasoning the way you phrased/reasoned it initially. Now you just rephrased it and pretend I did not notice it. — Emptyheady
That is fine. Like I said our moral philosophies differ. The keyword here is "suffering." I care more about (individual) rights than suffering. — Emptyheady
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.