How do we work out what their interests are, since we can't ask, and we're not ourselves of those species?
And, having found out, why ought we concern ourselves with those interests being met? — Isaac
I believe the argument is that sentient creatures would have the same basic interests as human beings, which I suppose could be summarised as the freedom to pursue their own lives as they see fit. — Graeme M
what we do today by industrialising so much of our interactions with nature seems needing some kind of constraint. — Graeme M
we could pose the claim that we want things to be good for other people because they have feelings about being alive. — Graeme M
It just seems good to want others to feel good (be happy rather than unhappy). — Graeme M
I agree, but I don't think you've made the case that a well cared for farm animal wouldn't feel good over its lifetime even if raised for slaughter. Even harder with an egg-laying chicken, or a fish. — Isaac
Interestingly, while many would agree with these principles and endorse legislating to protect these rights for human beings, they seem far less concerned with the rights of other species. While the UN can observe that "disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind", I would say the same in regard to the treatment of other species. — Graeme M
it’s not the norm that animals are raised this way (nice pastures, good food, etc). — schopenhauer1
if you can survive without eating meat, why do it other than it tastes good? — schopenhauer1
How do you not commit a naturalistic fallacy in justifying it? — schopenhauer1
Given the sheer scale of our contempt for other sentient sepecies and given that we profess today to be deeply interested in just treatment of others, it seems to me that veganism is entirely consistent with our everyday ethics and as such open to being considered a standard ethical practice. It surprises me how vehemently people object to this idea. — Graeme M
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
No. It ought to be. — Isaac
An odd question. As if we do other things for other sorts of reasons. Why do you go for a walk? Why do you seek relationships? Why do you listen to music? I'm struggling to see why eating meat has to have some existential urgency to it that other activities lack. — Isaac
The naturalistic fallacy just expresses your belief that what is natural is not necessarily what is good. It might be. It's not like you've got some competing theory of what is good that is more coherent. I think that if we want to eat meat, but we also want to see animals happy, we have to find a way of achieving both, or balancing those desires. I'm not seeing any argument as to why one of those desires must be met but the other is to be discarded. — Isaac
I don't see the equivalency of taking a walk in the park and killing certain highly sentient animals. I'm not sure why you are playing dumb here and equivocating. Seems to be stalling. — schopenhauer1
To assume that we it is fine to eat meat because our ancestors did or because other animals do, would be wrong. — schopenhauer1
A competing theory? You never provided one. — schopenhauer1
So because you don't see it, I must be playing dumb? Seems a theme. One wonders what exactly you expect from a discussion forum whilst assuming everyone else simply must see the world the same way you do. — Isaac
Why? — Isaac
Not my place to. I'm critiquing your post. — Isaac
Your seeming disregard for the difference between humans and other animals from a moral point of view makes your argument hard to take seriously. — T Clark
From the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.
The above also "should be everyday practice for ethical societies". Unfortunately there are many in the US, for example, who are vehemently opposed to the above. There are a lot of self-centered people in this world. How is it that you are surprised "how vehemently people object to [ethical veganism]"? — ThinkOfOne
Right. But for a prey animal that life includes being hunted, being free to roam, migrating, having large herds... We prevent much of that. Which should we take as a their priority? — Isaac
Would your argument apply, for example, to pets? Keeping other humans on a lead would be degrading to a point where the victim might even choose death over such treatment. So is dog-owning up there with meat-eating for you? — Isaac
Farm animals live longer than wild ones, so if it's being alive that's the objective, farming is better. If it's living some kind of 'fullest life' that matters, then being hunted is as much contender for part of a prey animal's natural life as any activity. I'm still not seeing in there the conclusion that we ought leave well alone. — Isaac
I agree, but I don't think you've made the case that a well cared for farm animal wouldn't feel good over its lifetime even if raised for slaughter. Even harder with an egg-laying chicken, or a fish. — Isaac
The point you missed is that there are many self-centered people in this world who are vehemently opposed to what SHOULD "be everyday practice for ethical societies" when they see it as infringing on what they enjoy or even when they don't see a direct benefit for themselves. As such it should come as no surprise "how vehemently people object to [ethical veganism]". — ThinkOfOne
something (highly sentient) getting killed and something not seems like a distinction that is pretty recognizable as an event — schopenhauer1
Our ancestors did a whole bunch of X things. Doesn't make our ancestors right. Or, perhaps more nuanced, doesn't make it right anymore. — schopenhauer1
Not my place to. I'm critiquing your post. — Isaac
And I was critiquing yours. — schopenhauer1
we cannot prevent a free human being from dying in a car accident or being seriously injured from getting into a fight. But that person is at least free. — Graeme M
Genuine pet ownership, where the well-being of the pet is important, could be seen to be a form of guardianship. — Graeme M
CAFO breeding of chickens for meat and eggs is not about their well-being in any shape or form. — Graeme M
Other animals being alive is not the objective. Acting ethically is. — Graeme M
if animals are farmed in CAFO systems or skinned alive to produce fur, an ethical member would choose not to buy such products and would support legislation to prevent such systems. — Graeme M
Veganism is the idea that we act ethically towards other species. — Graeme M
one thing all vegans have in common is a plant-based diet avoiding all animal foods such as meat (including fish, shellfish and insects), dairy, eggs and honey - as well as avoiding animal-derived materials, — https://www.vegansociety.com/go-vegan/definition-veganism
It might do. You've not given any account of what makes things right yet, so 'our ancestors did it' is currently as good a contender as any. — Isaac
But I don't see what my personal meta-ethical stance has to do with your position.
How does your caricature of my position further your argument or counter the points I raised against it? — Isaac
I’m arguing against your position — schopenhauer1
if you can survive without eating meat, why do it other than it tastes good? How do you not commit a naturalistic fallacy in justifying it? We can choose, and have reasons. Enough there to choose not killing large mammals and birds if we don't have to. — schopenhauer1
...if you're not willing to defend that position, then why post it? — Isaac
I was critiquing your ancestors theory. — schopenhauer1
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.