• Buxtebuddha
    1.7k
    So simple a declaration becomes an argument.
  • Barry Etheridge
    349


    One that can very easily be knocked down by proof of a counterexample.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    Why do you have to be such a rude twat?Ovaloid

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    Al right, let's take a step back for a moment. It seems that I have hit a nerve with some animal lovers and that has led to some irrational, shoddy and lazy responses. With the latest replies, it seems that we are going off-track and heading towards a messy mud fight.

    OP posits the following questions: “How can we justify zoos? (…) Is there any ethical argument in defense of locking wild animals up for entertainment and monetary gain?” This is a reasonable question and I responded: “Easy. Animals have no rights and can therefore be used as property/utility by moral agents (i.e. humans).

    Now, there are two ways to approach this issue. The first one is a legal one, which is extremely easily to do, because we already have zoos, so apparently it is legally permissible and justified to do so. In jurisprudence, animals do not have rights like humans do. This is an objective fact in a descriptive way. I can only anticipate on a response filled with red herrings and equivocations… 3…2…1... and here we go…

    But what OP is looking for is the normative side of the moral debate. So the other approach is a moral philosophical justification, a normative one. Should animals have rights like human rights? I do not think so. I provided one, namely one related to moral agency (or sometimes referred as moral responsibility).

    I am basically making a connection between rights and (moral) responsibilities/agencies. If Chomsky and I every agree, it is by sheer accident.

    Only Thorongil has given a simple but solid response, namely: “To which one can reply, as I would, that they do.” So whatever normative claims I make, one can simply reject it in disagreement. There is not much I can say beyond “Ok.” I do not claim that my normative claim is superior or less arbitrary. I just simply answer OP’s questions.

    If you think rights is given on the basis of suffering, or dick size, fine by all means make your case, as I can make mine. Most people eat meat, have pets as property or have utilised animals in some way (directly or indirectly). If you think we should not do that, then it is you that has a controversial moral position – I am the least controversial so far.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    Provide a link and - if it's not the entire post - a paragraph number, and I'd be happy to do so.andrewk

    http://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/40176
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    That post argues that any member of the species homo sapiens has moral agency, moral responsibility and rights.

    Such an assertion is fundamental and one either accepts it or not according to whether it is consistent with one's intuitions - whether it 'feels' right. Pro-lifers accept it, for instance. Apparently you accept it. I don't, because it seems bizarre to me, given that it implies that a single-cell fertilised ovum and a brain-dead body kept alive on a ventilator both have moral responsibility. Since moral responsibility is a rubbery term that can be made to mean almost anything one wants it to mean, one can neither prove the truth or falsity of such an assertion. It just seems weird, and feels wrong, to me, so I don't accept it.
  • Emptyheady
    228


    This criticism is fair, but ultimately quite weak -- or better stated, all alternatives are more counter-intuitive, vague, ambiguous ("rubbery term"). Moral agency/responsibility seems to me to be the least controversial position. Chomsky even called it a "truism." I won't go that far, but I would claim it is intuitively accepted among the populous.

    But if you have got something better to offer, I'd love to hear it.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    I don't think it is intuitively accepted amongst the populace, as to accept it implies ascribing rights to a fertilised ovum, and hence being opposed to abortion at any term. According to that interesting survey posted by Barry (here), in all Western countries except the USA, the vast majority of people have no problem with early-term abortion and, even in the God-fearing USA, just over half have no problem with it.

    As to what alternative I have to offer, I just go with Jeremy Bentham's 'Can they suffer?'. This is completely consistent with my intuitions and just feels absolutely right. I understand that for some others, things like Freedom are more important, but for me 'Can they suffer' is the most important moral principle.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    I don't think it is intuitively accepted amongst the populace, as to accept it implies ascribing rights to a fertilised ovum, and hence being opposed to abortion at any term. According to that interesting survey posted by Barry (here), in all Western countries except the USA, the vast majority of people have no problem with early-term abortion and, even in the God-fearing USA, just over half have no problem with it.andrewk

    I do not see how this is relevant. But anyway, most people are mostly pro-life, going by what you cited.

    As to what alternative I have to offer, I just go with Jeremy Bentham's 'Can they suffer?'. This is completely consistent with my intuitions and just feels absolutely right. I understand that for some others, things like Freedom are more important, but for me 'Can they suffer' is the most important moral principle.andrewk

    "suffering" is extremely ambiguous, and I have yet to meet a consistent utilitarian, as I continually notices equivocations. I was a negative utilitarian for a period of time, but I had to give it up as I could not defend it without contradicting myself -- or coming up with ad hoc justifications.
  • MonfortS26
    256
    How is suffering ambiguous but moral agency isn't? I haven't really seen any sort of evidence showing that humans have this mystical thing called moral agency that other animals do not.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    Let me elaborate a bit why I have some issues with utilitarianism or most forms of consequentialism.

    Ask you yourself the following moral question: "when is it morally justified to rape an innocent child?"

    A consequentialist would answer: 'well that depends on the consequences.' A utilitarian could state that it depends whether it maximises the sum of aggregate happiness. This means that group rape could make raping morally more justifiable, and the larger the group, the better it would be. Sadism would be morally justified to indulge.

    Putting "suffering" at the centre of your normative moral view is troubling.

    Let's say Bob murders Sarah. Is it morally justified? Well, that depends. How much did she suffer with the murder? Some murders can be done with pretty much no suffering at all. Let's say that when Sarah was alive, she was constantly suffering from an terminal illness. If your moral goal is to minimise suffering -- and there is no cure, nor medicine -- one ought to murder her to end the suffering.

    Now, you can solve these issues -- as I have tried myself -- but only by stretching the definition of "suffering" to your own convenience, pretty much to the point of ad hoc justifications and inconsistencies.

    Now, this is just the top of the iceberg of issues I have with these lines of reasoning. Having read more about neuroscience, psychology and evolutionary biology, has made me simply drop it.

    Anyway, this is just a brief reply to give you an idea and to get the ball rolling.

    I would love to see how one of you can persuade me back.
  • MonfortS26
    256
    So what lies at the center of your moral view?
  • Emptyheady
    228
    I subscribe to Virtue Ethics with a personal tweak inspired by Zimbardo.

    As a conservative, I do not believe in a universal principle or maxim that we ought to follow. Morality is extremely complex. I believe it is a practice based on tradition.

    SEP:

    "Conservatives reject revolutionary Jacobinism’s espousal of political rationalism, which attempts to reconstruct society from abstract principles or general blueprint, without reference to tradition. Conservatives view society not as a machine but as a highly complex organism, and hold therefore that “without the aid of experience, reason cannot prescribe political ideals that can be realised in practice” (Beiser 1992: 283).

    (...)

    Conservatism therefore rests on what may be termed particularist scepticism concerning abstract rational principles. Conservatives regard the radical’s rationalism as “metaphysical” in ignoring particular social, economic and historical conditions:

    I cannot [praise or blame] human actions…on a simple view of the object, as it stands stripped of every relation, in all the nakedness and solitude of metaphysical abstraction; (Burke, WS III: 58)

    circumstances give every political principle its colour. (Cobban 1960: 75)
    "


    edit: by the way, this is also how I dropped right-wing libertarianism. However much I tend to agree with libertarians, fundamentally, I find it simply untenable.
  • jkop
    906
    Nowadays we can see films of the lives of animals in their natural habitat, so the zoo has little reason to capture and lock up animals in cages just to show them to people. The zoo is, however, justified as an institution for education, research, and preservation.
  • MonfortS26
    256
    I don't really understand that point of view. How could tradition be the center of a moral view?
  • BC
    13.6k
    Nowadays we can see films of the lives of animals in their natural habitatjkop

    One naturalist - photographer recommended we stop taking pictures of wild animals, too, especially where the presence of photographers becomes a further degradation of the environment. Flying to somewhere in Africa, Central America, Nepal, Siberia, wherever, to drive around, camp, photograph, and so on isn't helping wild animals. There is already a huge supply of nature pictures, he noted. Just being there, driving around, camping, and all that is one more small assault on already fragile environments and ecologies.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    Yes, I can't see any ambiguity either. Nor any problem with consistency. Certainly I don't recall encountering problems with consistency in my day-to-day ethical decision-making.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    I believe that humans are social beings with (often conflicting) interests and that we can all be better off if we 'get along' so-to-say. I believe that morality plays a role in the social dynamic (i.e. civilisation) and that its workings are extremely complicated.

    Tradition plays a key role here.

    I exampled tradition as to why I reject that sort of thinking I was referring to. I then explained why I rejected the moral (and political) reasoning from principles and maxims which is based on pure reason or rationalism, and not experience (i.e. tradition). Conservatives typically value tradition, because it is accumulated wisdom via many practices and experiences throughout many generations that we might not fully understand and/or are capable of to articulate. Combining this with the idea of human nature that has been evolved according to the theory of evolution and you end up how I approach my politics and ethics.

    As Pinker said in his book The Blank Slate (2002):

    “Traditions such as religion, the family, social customs, sexual mores, and political institutions are a distillation of time-tested techniques that let us work around the shortcomings of human nature. They are as applicable to humans today as they were when they developed, even if no one today can explain their rationale. However imperfect society may be, we should measure it against the cruelty and deprivation of the actual past, not the harmony and affluence of an imagined future. We are fortunate enough to live in a society that more or less works, and our first priority should be not to screw it up, because human nature always leaves us teetering on the brink of barbarism. And since no one is smart enough to predict the behaviour of a single human being, let alone millions of them interacting in a society, we should distrust any formula for changing society from the top down, because it is likely to have unintended consequences that are worse than the problems it was designed to fix”
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    I would love to see how one of you can persuade me back.Emptyheady
    I can't see any need to persuade you back. Virtue ethics is an excellent moral framework that will produce similar ethical conclusions in the vast majority of situations one is likely to encounter, so I doubt that society will be any the better or worse for you or I choosing to switch between a utilitarian and a virtue ethics framework.

    The example of group rape reminds me of Bernard Williams' silly thought experiment about the explorer and the indians (there was a good essay about this by Paul on the old site). Firstly it misunderstands how a utilitarian would likely analyse such a situation, and draws the wrong inference about what they would conclude, and secondly, the situation suggested is so far removed from anything I'm ever likely to encounter as to be irrelevant to practical ethics.

    I wouldn't say I was a committed utilitarian, in the sense of being convinced that every decision I ever make should be made on utilitarian principles. I always leave the door open for other influences, be they deontological, virtue-based or something else. But so far I don't think I've encountered a moral dilemma for which one of the other frameworks that seem reasonable to me (which excludes things like divine-command and honour-based systems, as well as anything to do with Ayn Rand) clearly recommended a different decision from the one I came to via utilitarianism. Nor do I expect that to happen in the remainder of my life.

    Sure I've had dilemmas, but I've found that in such cases the other systems were as unclear as utilitarianism about what the best action was.
  • VagabondSpectre
    1.9k
    Zoos aren't just for the public display of animals, and so if we're talking about the study and conservation function of zoos then a "greater good" defense can be raised based on the fact that this study and conservation is better for animal species in the long run.

    Focusing only on zoos whose sole or main purpose is the public display of animals, yes indeed there is at lest some degree of moral onus upon us to ensure that the animals we keep for our own entertainment are not suffering unduly because of it (at least according to my own moral 'beliefs'). On the one hand we could easily offer an animal a more stimulating or happy existence in captivity, if done right (barring certain animals like whales, whose needs are beyond us), but on the other hand if all we do is exploit captive animals and give nothing back to them then surely we're committing a moral sin at least as far as the animal is concerned.

    In the best case zoos for entertainment can be a happy alliance between often willing captive animals where the zoo gets an income stream and the animal gets a fat, happy, and generally conflict free existence.

    In the worst case zoos can be horrendous places of suffering where people pay for the novelty of seeing something new, even if it's sick or dying. To whatever extent we extend moral considerations of these kinds toward animals is the degree to which such zoos are morally culpable for transgressing. I can't exactly define the extent to which we owe animals moral considerations, but what I can tell you is that as we gain the technology and capability to survive and thrive free of cruelty to animals, whatever moral onus there is on us to do so only increases.
  • jkop
    906
    Flying to somewhere in Africa, Central America, Nepal, Siberia, wherever, to drive around, camp, photograph, and so on isn't helping wild animals.Bitter Crank
    We should not selectively look at the flying, driving, and camping when the published films produce acquaintance, knowledge and empathy towards wild animals. If we'd only see Jaws, and other films that exploit our ignorance or selectively show wild animals as monsters, then the situation would be worse for the animals, and there would be little interest to fund organisations who work for animals' rights, preservation and so on. Urban populations would have no clue of the relation between their consumption and the fate of wild animals.
  • Ovaloid
    67
    Ask you yourself the following moral question: "when is it morally justified to rape an innocent child?"

    A consequentialist would answer: 'well that depends on the consequences.' A utilitarian could state that it depends whether it maximises the sum of aggregate happiness. This means that group rape could make raping morally more justifiable, and the larger the group, the better it would be. Sadism would be morally justified to indulge.

    Putting "suffering" at the centre of your normative moral view is troubling.
    Emptyheady
    Actually, that's a problem with putting happiness at the centre. Putting suffering at the centre solves that because then the babies experience of suffering trumps the sadists' experience of pleasure.

    Also, what is all this bs about how uncontroversial your view is? Why on earth do you care? How can you care? Popularity is the very least thing one should be concerned about when evaluating any view.
  • Emptyheady
    228
    Okay, this is the last time I respond to you if you do not engage properly in a discussion, which includes reading my entire post and at least attempting to understand it.

    Did you bother to read the rest? Didn't I mention negative utilitarianism by Popper before (somewhere)?

    Popper thinks he solved the issues of utilitarianism by turning it negative, namely solely focussing it on suffering -- I highly dispute that already in the rest of my post. You stumble upon the exact same issues that Kant mentioned regarding 'not using people as merely means to an end'.

    Take the doctor's dilemma scenario with organ harvesting.

    Go open a book about ethics for the love of god...

    I wouldn't say I was a committed utilitarian, in the sense of being convinced that every decision I ever make should be made on utilitarian principles. I always leave the door open for other influences, be they deontological, virtue-based or something else.andrewk

    Yeah, you sound really consistent... :-}
  • intrapersona
    579
    Easy. Animals have no rights and can therefore be used as property/utility by moral agents (i.e. humans).Emptyheady

    What makes us moral agents and them not?
    Consiousness?
    Rationality?
    Ovaloid

    What properties do humans have that give them those rights?
    Would you be ok with being used as property/utility by beings with more of said properties?
    Ovaloid

    If a more intelligent/rational being encapsulated me in a zoo, would it be worse than we imprisoning lower creatures you mean? Isn't that what the earth is already? The aliens are watching over as maaaaaan.
  • intrapersona
    579
    If you want to say it is wrong to subject other creatures (even of lower intelligence) to imprisonment then you might as well have to disagree with how nature/evolution designed most of it's animals to eat each other. Subjecting creatures to your will which they don't agree with, whether it be imprisonment or murder, is committing the same act of immorality.

    Let's face it, this place is horrendously vicious... would you sign up for a game where all animals are just fucking stupid and go around trying to eat each other all day? Fuck That! Fuck Nature! and rationality doesn't always force that viciousness out of the world either, in fact it enhances it sometimes (hitler).
  • intrapersona
    579
    Did anyone mention that Decartes used to torture animals because he didn't believe they had "consciousness"?
  • Emptyheady
    228
    If animals do have rights, when can we start locking up animals in prison for killing other animals or making other animals suffer?

    Zoo?

    Oh the irony of animal lovers/leftists. Most vehement advocates of animals "rights", own animals in captivity.

  • intrapersona
    579
    Oh the irony of animal lovers/leftists. Most vehement advocates of animals "rights", own animals in captivity.Emptyheady

    lol, true but domestication = no suffering because genetic brainwashing forces dogs at least in to enjoying the protection and affection.

    If animals do have rights, when can we start locking up animals in prison for killing other animals or making other animals suffer?Emptyheady

    As far as I can tell... rationality = morals. Also there is no objective morality, I guess that is way nature is so fucking ruthless. But if you know better (have rationality and morality) then we chould exclude ourselves from natures evil reign. Two wrongs don't make a right and...

    ... at the end of all of this, we humans will point to nature with blame and lock it up for all eternity for it's shameful actions of millions of years. >:O
  • hunterkf5732
    73
    "I like going to zoos" seems like one good justification of it to me.Terrapin Station

    Would you say then that the rights of the animals held in these zoos don't enter into the discussion?
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