On the farm, humans minimise the suffering of animals they slaughter for food — counterpunch
Have you seen factory farm conditions? — Pfhorrest
No, I haven't, not really - and I'm sure the worst practices are horrifying, but when done well, farming need not be cruel. Indeed, it's a lot less cruel than nature. — counterpunch
Do you think a professional philosopher should be given special treatment, then? Should they be shielded from imbecilic comments and appalling reasoning? Why? — Bartricks
Anyone can call themselves a philosopher. Anyone can call themselves a scientist. But to be a professional philosopher requires having an academic post, which in turn requires having a PhD and a track record of producing peer reviewed publications. — Bartricks
You are misinformed. The designation "professional" means they earn money with it. It is their profession, or occupation, and they earn money with it. — god must be atheist
So, 'professional' should surely be understood to mean 'professional academic' not just anyone who has managed to earn money from philosophizing. — Bartricks
If "professional" means earning money, then "professional philosopher" means philosopher who earns money, be he or she good or bad. "Academic philosopher" is most likely also professional, but not all professional philosophers are academic philosophers. — god must be atheist
Your argument of catchy maxims getting generated only by populist mass philosophers — god must be atheist
And I have seen my share of bad academic philosophers. (Bad as judged by me.) — god must be atheist
...you need to be good - really good - at philosophy to be a professional academic... — Bartricks
arguably, you'd need to be quite bad at it - you need to prioritize boiling everything down to catchy maxims — Bartricks
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